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ProBlogger: 3 Ways Scheduling Will Make You a Better Blogger

ProBlogger: 3 Ways Scheduling Will Make You a Better Blogger

Link to @ProBlogger

3 Ways Scheduling Will Make You a Better Blogger

Posted: 30 Apr 2015 07:20 AM PDT

There's more things to do with a blog than there is hours in the day. These tips will help you schedule like a pro and get your life back.Do you feel a bit like a slave to your social media? Always thinking about your next blog post, forgetting to respond to that guy on Twitter, and never Pinning at the right time?

I know what it’s like to always feel like you’re running to catch up, instead of being in control of how and where you spend your time.

There’s nothing wrong with flying by the seat of your pants and only writing or hanging out on social media when inspiration strikes – if it works for you. If you’ve found that’s a little too chaotic to be sustainable long-term, then you’ll benefit from being more intentional with your time. Which frees you up to have even more of it.

Three Reasons Why Scheduling is Good

It gives you more time

If it’s one thing I hear the most, it’s that bloggers don’t have enough time in the day to do all the things they want to (or think they should) to build their blog and make it the best it can be.

Time is finite, it’s so easily wasted, and yeah, it feels like there’s just not enough of it. Many of us are working on our blogs in the cracks of time we have around other work, family, and life commitments, and there are periods where we feel as though we are succeeding at the juggle about as well as we’d succeed at performing brain surgery on a puppy.

The reality is, you have to make time. Nobody is going to walk in, grab your kids and say “we’re going to the park, you blog for a couple of hours” (are they? If they are, can you send them to me?!), or take on a big project at your day job to free up time for you to finally get started on that eBook you’ve been putting off. If you’re not scheduling in time to blog, and scheduling your posts and social media updates, then of course you’re not getting as much done as you would like.

Scheduling = more time. Time to live, time to work evenly on all your projects, time to take your own kids to the park. (Tweet that!)

It gives you more flexibility

To be honest, I don’t know of any blogger who can sit on the internet all day and respond in real time, whether that’s publishing at the most appropriate hour, or answering every email, tweet, and Facebook message received. Nobody is up at two in the morning Pinning their latest posts because that’s when their particular audience is online (hello working from the Southern Hemisphere).

There are some people who like to read my blog at five in the morning. There are hundreds who come after I’ve gone to bed at night. The last thing I want to do is hit publish before sunup, but I also don’t want to miss out on the traffic that comes at the most convenient time for them, so post scheduling works in both my favour and theirs.

I know sometimes the word “schedule” makes people shudder, and they’ll tell you they prefer “flexible” any day. Schedule sounds locked down, tight, rigid. The beauty of working online is so we can publish immediately, spontaneously, and so we don’t have to toe the line of a 9-to-5. But done right, scheduling can bring freedom – what you want is a flexible schedule, something that works just for you.

Scheduling means I can more effectively work around my young family, who I really do have to respond in real time to. When my work is scheduled and my home day goes awry, I’ve got the flexibility to be present in the moment. If home is quiet, I’ve got the flexibility to blog and maybe set a few more scheduled posts and updates for the times I can’t be online. This kind of flexibility is invaluable.

It gives you control

One of the biggest lessons I learned last year is that I don’t work well in chaos. Trying to work, live, run a family, and blog all at once however I could fit it in was benefiting no-one. Least of all me. I felt stressed, constantly undone, forever forgetting things, and I went to bed almost every day knowing I’d let at least one person down.

Feeling always behind the eight ball is not how I want to get through each day long-term. I don’t want to feel reactionary to each situation as it arises, I’d rather be a step ahead, with a clear head, and proactive.

Scheduling allows me to control my time online, instead of it controlling me. I can write when I want, I can publish when I want, I can be on social media when I want, and there’s flexibility at the end of the day to rejig it if necessary. My readers get content in the times that work for them, and I can interact in the times that work for me. Win-win!

Three Ways Scheduling will Make You a Better Blogger

You are more present

Well, OK – the beauty of scheduling means you can blog without actually physically being present. But the times when you are online, you can be fully present. This is your time to blog, to interact on social media, to chat on Twitter. You don’t also have to be cooking dinner, finding gym shoes, or emailing your boss.

You can work when you’ve got the time spare, and you can concentrate better during that time.

You are more considered

So many mistakes are made when you rush, when you’re throwing something up and running out the door. If you’re writing something that isn’t going up until next Tuesday, there’s no rush. You can write, edit, and give it a once-over between now and then, picking up issues, typos, and adding that link to the article you just couldn’t remember at the time.

When you’re fully present with your writing or your social media, you write better and are more likely to avoid problems that crop up when your concentration is divided. You look more in control and authoritative. And you’re interacting when it’s best for you.

You’re sharing what matters

I know what it’s like when you’ve just found five cool things that your readers will love, but you can’t share all five at once – and you’re likely to forget or give up if you physically post them across a reasonable period of time. Scheduling helpful or funny articles at the times your audience would most like to see them (i.e. when they’re online and they’ve actually got the time to click through) means you’re being the most useful to them you can be. And we all know Usefulness is King!

You’re also not rushing to share something, anything in order to be seen – you’re sharing what’s useful, entertaining, or inspiring because you’ve got the time to find those things, and you’re giving it to your audience at the right time.

Three Ways To Schedule your Work

Start with a plan

I always say planning is essential to be more efficient and to use your time more wisely. In 5 Ways to Make Your Blogging Life Easier, I talk about planning (and scheduling + automating!) and how they can give you more freedom. In order to schedule your time and your content, you have to know what you want to do, where you want it to take you, and when you work best.

I do everything from long-term checklists and calendars to a five-minute brainstorm and rough outline of the tasks of the day and in what order I’ll do them. I can’t recommend enough that five-minute brainstorm before you get started – it saves a lot of time and heartache later. Slotting your tasks into the time you have available that day will be the best thing you can do that morning to get started on the right foot.

Then, of course, you can branch out into larger, more long-term goals and lists (and refer to those lists when writing your monthly, weekly, or daily plan).

Related: Setting Blog Goals: Why You Need Them, and How To Write Them

Do what works

Get to know the automation tools available out there for bloggers – Buffer, Hootsuite, CoSchedule, Edgar, or whichever one works for you. Get to know when your audience is online, what kinds of updates they respond to, and what kinds of content you enjoy creating. There’s no point posting to Facebook 11 times a day if it’s irrelevant, uninteresting, or clickbait.

Related: Boost Your Organic Reach on Facebook with These Tips

Use social media scheduling

Different apps work for different needs, although the ones I mentioned in the previous point usually cover several platforms. For example, I use CoSchedule to schedule my daily posts to Facebook and Twitter, and they make it easier to post way into the future. I can post several times to Twitter without leaving my WordPress dashboard. Facebook prefers its own scheduling tool, so if I can, I’ll delete the CoSchedule upload to Facebook and use the Facebook scheduler. If’I’m out that day, I leave the CoSchedule one – I do find that the Facebook schedule has better reach.

I use Tailwind for Pinterest scheduling, Buffer for tweets on Twitter or tweeting articles from other sites, and I’m interested at looking into Edgar for a couple of other things I’ve got in mind. I’d love to know which one you use though, and why? I think they’re all useful for different things.

Related: How to Socialize Your Posts for Maximum Effect

Stacey is the Managing Editor of ProBlogger.net: a writer, blogger, and full-time word nerd balancing it all with being a stay-at-home mum. She writes about all this and more at Veggie Mama. Chat with her on Twitter @veggie_mama or be entertained on Facebook.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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3 Ways Scheduling Will Make You a Better Blogger

Looking for Premium WP Themes and Plugins? Check out WPeka Club - DailyBlogTips

Looking for Premium WP Themes and Plugins? Check out WPeka Club - DailyBlogTips


Looking for Premium WP Themes and Plugins? Check out WPeka Club

Posted: 29 Apr 2015 05:14 AM PDT

The beauty of using WordPress as your platform is that you can you change your design whenever you wants with a couple of clicks. It’s just a matter of finding a new theme, uploading and activating it from your dashboard.

Now if you are looking for a professional design, purchasing a premium theme could be a good idea, and those tend to be more polished and they come with more customization features. Want a recommendation for such a theme? Check out WPeka.com, a resource that I came across a couple of weeks ago.

They have over 39 themes available, and you can browse according to category and style. For instance, they have themes that are AdSense-ready, themes for e-commerce, themes for the launch of a product and so on.

wpeka

One thing I liked about them is the pricing: every theme costs $19, which is quite affordable if you compare with some theme shops that charge as much as $100 for a single premium theme. You also have the option to subscribe paying a monthly fee (starting at $27), and this will give you access to all the themes and plugins.

The premium plugins are another strength of the site (click here to view all). They have over 55 premium plugins available, to help you customize your site in all sorts of ways. Here are some examples:

-BackupBreeze (helps you to backup automatically)
-Click Missile (automatically switch between mobile and desktop ads)
-E-Affiliate (helps you to insert and manage affiliate links)
-Community Board (adds forum capabilities to your site)
-Promotional Bar (adds a bar on top of your site to promote your products)

Overall it’s a nice resource for WordPress users, and they are constantly releasing new products and WP themes, so check it out!

Wanna learn how to make more money with your website? Check the Online Profits training program!


7 Ways to Make Your Posts Pop on Social Media

Posted: 28 Apr 2015 02:10 PM PDT

As a marketing tool, blogging is still very much alive and kicking. Case in point: In a study by Social Media Examiner, 58 percent of marketers rank written content as their No. 1 priority on social media. Meanwhile, 68 percent plan to blog more than they do now in the coming years.

Considering what blogging does for businesses, those stats make sense. According to Hubspot, companies that blog bring in more website visitors, more inbound links, more indexed pages and more leads per month than those that don’t. Of course, this is assuming the blogs in question are:

  • High-quality
  • Able to get readers to take a desired course of action
  • Well-represented on social media

By now, you already know how to do No. 1 and No. 2. In this post, I’ll discuss No. 3: aka how to draw eyeballs to your blogs in the noisy world of social media.

1. Craft a Kickass Headline

If Copyblogger is to be believed, at least half of your time should be spent writing the headline. That’s because eight out of 10 people read headline copy, while only 2 out of 10 bother to read the rest.

Sounds absurd? Not really. Readers can only consume so many articles a day, so if they want to read one piece out of the hundreds on their newsfeed, they should be able to tell ? within 5 seconds flat ? whether it’s worth the read or not. In other words, a clickbait-y headline might not salvage a mediocre piece, but a ho-hum headline is a surefire way to get an excellent article bypassed.

Try to take a leaf out of BuzzFeed’s book, and craft headlines that push readers’ curiosity buttons. You can also refer to Buffer’s comprehensive guide on headline formulas, or cheat your way to headline ideas via title generators like those from Hubspot, Portent and WebpageFX.

2. Always Include at Least One Image

A wise man once said: “One grain of rice can tip the scale. One image may be the difference between victory and defeat.” Mulan references aside, it’s amazing what one photo can do to your social share count!

In a study by OkDork, posts with images are twice as likely to get shared on Facebook and Twitter as those without. Moreover, posts that utilized Open Graph meta tags are three times as likely to get shared, since these tags allow you to customize the thumbnails pulled by social networking sites. For a detailed guide on using Open Graph, see this post by Jay Hoffmann. If you use SEO by Yoast as your SEO plugin, you?re in luck ? Open Graph meta tags are built into the plugin.

3. Choose Your Images Carefully

It’s not enough to just have an image, though. According to Hubspot, your image has to be:

  • Relevant. If a post is about a recipe, you can’t use an image of a Star Wars action figure ? unless maybe your headline is ?5 Ways to Make Lasagna Luke Skywalker Will Love.?
  • Compelling. When you have a headline like “10 Ways to Escape the Corporate Rat Race,” it’s better to use a photo of a man in a suit rushing past the finish line than an oh-so-common image of an office worker falling asleep over a desk.
  • High Quality. Are you a crap photographer? Source your images from people who aren?t. Trust me, you?re better off that way. There are literally thousands of free, high quality images out there and even tools to search for them.
  • Optimized for All Screen Sizes. A plugin like Hammy will take care of this for you.
  • Within Your Rights to Use. This one can be tricky. If you’re not careful, you could end up like these copywriters who paid $4,000 for a $10 photo. It’s best to search for Creative Commons images, which require attribution, or Creative Commons Zero images, which do not.

The more your posts’ images meet these criteria, the better.

4. Overlay Text on Your Images

You know those photos of quotable quotes superimposed over beautiful scenery? Those are great examples of overlaying text on images. They work pretty well as marketing materials, since people are naturally drawn to visuals. Also, they’re quite easy to make, thanks to the following tools:

  • Canva. With its user-friendly features like templates, custom image sizes, and drag-and-drop interface, Canva is perfect for those who don’t have the resources to hire a professional designer.
  • Pablo. Here, all you have to do is write your text, pick a background image and you’re good to go. Other customization options, such as font size and formatting, are available.
  • PicMonkey. If basic features are all you need, PicMonkey is available for free. Edit, crop, and perform basic modifications to images right in your browser.
  • ReciteThis. Like PicMonkey, ReciteThis is a free, Web-based tool. Its intuitive interface ensures that you’ll know your way around it in no time.

Whether you want to spruce up photos or add a more creative twist to your marketing campaign, overlaying text on images is a great technique to learn. For more tips on this, check out these 19 inspiring examples.

5. Tailor Image Sizes for Different Social Networks

Yes, size matters too. For example, a tall image works better for Pinterest than for Facebook, while the opposite is true of wide images. Buffer has a great post on ideal image sizes for social media posts, though the general rules are as follows:

  • Facebook: 1,200 x 628 pixels
  • Twitter: 1,024 x 512 pixels
  • Google+: 800 x 1,200 pixels
  • LinkedIn: 800 x 800 pixels
  • Pinterest: 735 x 1,102 pixels
  • Instagram: 1,200 x 1,200 pixels

If you take these sizes into account, you will fill up the optimum amount of screen real estate on your social platforms, without your images getting distorted or cut off.

6. Use the Power of Suggestion

No, we’re not talking about Jedi mind tricks. We’re talking about giving your audience big, flashing signs that say: “Hey, can you do this for me? It’s free!” Make it easy to tweet quotes from your article with Click to Tweet, or appeal to your readers? inner pinner with a readily-accessible Pin It button overlaid on your images.

7. Appeal to Your Audience with Colors

People respond subconsciously to colors. For example, yellow is often associated with optimism, while red is associated with passion. If you know how to mix and balance them as detailed here, you’ll be able to avoid school uniform syndrome; that is, the presence of complementary but boring colors.

Be careful not to oversimplify the meaning of colors, though. To quote marketing strategist Gregory Ciotti: “?Elements such as personal preferences, experiences, upbringing, cultural differences, context, etc., often muddy the effect individual colors have on us. So the idea that colors such as yellow or purple are able to invoke some sort of hyper-specific emotion is about as accurate as your standard Tarot card reading.” Couldn?t say it better myself.

Closing Thoughts

These rules aren’t set in stone. Experiment with these one at a time, and see which one of them works best. The important thing is to try, analyze and implement the ones that resonate the most with your specific audience. Also, remember to keep learning new things, so you’ll always be one of the forerunners in your industry.

Adrienne Erin is a freelance writer and designer who blogs at Design Roast. Follow @adrienneerin on Twitter to get in touch.

Wanna learn how to make more money with your website? Check the Online Profits training program!