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ProBlogger: Beginner Week – Katie180′s success story

ProBlogger: Beginner Week – Katie180′s success story

Link to @ProBlogger

Beginner Week – Katie180′s success story

Posted: 03 Mar 2014 08:13 AM PST

Theme WeekKATIE180 (2)

The name "Katie 180" was gaining traction in Australian blogging circles before Katie Rainbird's site was even launched. Two short months after she first pressed "publish", Eden Riley, one of Australia's best bloggers, pointed her out in the crowd of a Digital Parents conference. "If you want to know how to start a blog," she said, "just go and read Katie180". This caught the attention of one Darren Rowse in the audience, who quickly secured her to speak at his own conference later that year.

So how did someone who had only a handful of posts to her name get the attention of the Aussie big guns – something we all would have loved in our early days?

Well, let's find out.

The Beginning

With a long-held dream of writing, Katie believed she could seamlessly marry her newfound nutrition knowledge with her love of prose. Eschewing the more traditional route of diet advice private practice, Katie took to the internet with her smarts and a burning ambition: Write. Be seen.

"Whilst studying nutrition I started planning to take my knowledge and put it to paper, so to speak," she says. "Originally I thought about freelancing, but once I discovered blogging it was a real 'ah-ha' moment for me and I just KNEW that was the way for me to go!"

Without wanting to rush into things, Katie ensured her site was properly designed and she was finished her studies before launching. A far cry from some of us who blog first and ask questions later!

"Well I didn't really wait long when you consider that I only decided upon blogging in my final year of college (two years ago)," she says. "I wanted to be qualified before I started blogging about nutrition, and I wanted it to be perfect – ha! But I set my mind to a New Year launch, and even though my blog design wasn't up to my perfect standards, I hit publish on my first post on January 10th, 2013.

With all that time to tinker before birthing her blog baby, she did a lot of behind-the-scenes preparation. A list that looks a little something like this:

  • Firstly I applied to a call out for guest bloggers on an American based raw food blog, which was accepted and I posted for them with strict deadlines, word counts and of course, content – although I was a nutritionist I wasn't a raw foodie so it tested my skills.
  • I attended writing and blogging courses held at the Australian Writers' Centre.
  • I "collected" other nutrition or healthy/foodie types of blogs (even those I didn't really like or align with) to get a feel for what was going on in this genre and I would take note of which posts received the most commentary or interaction.
  • I tested the waters with a Facebook group on my personal Facebook page, which was also called Katie180 and I would post there a couple of times a week: recipes, photos of food, summaries of nutrient actions and fast facts kind of stuff. It was quite well received and gave me a lot of confidence that so too would my real blog once I started it. It also provided me with an audience ready to follow me over.
  • I also did this with Instagram, I built up a following and a fair few people asked after my blog before it was even launched so I knew that I'd have readers there too.
  • I outsourced my blog design to a professional team and spent many months working with them on my logo, header, colour scheme, format etc.
  • Once I was blogging I quickly joined Twitter and set up a professional Facebook page and I'd plug every post across these two platforms plus my original Katie180 Facebook group and Instagram (even though that's a bit cheeky but I wanted to catch readers any way I could!)

But with all that preparation and forward-thinking, Katie was still plagued with the concerns that any new blogger has: that no-one would read her blog. "That I'd put all this effort in and it would just be sitting there, sad and alone!" she says.

As usually happens, the excitement of starting a blog soon overshadowed those early-days concerns. Katie says it was a relief to have her voice heard, as was "breaking with convention insofar as my study path was concerned, not going into practice, not waiting around for people to come and find me, rather putting myself out there loud and proud!"

Before the Blog: What did she learn?

"The most important things I learned were from other bloggers (just from reading their blogs): to write in my own voice – be authentic, brave and passionate. To connect – respond, reply, interact across social media because that makes readers feel important and promotes loyal readership (and word of mouth.) To blog regularly – keep in their faces, keep relevant, be out there!"

Early Days: what did she learn?

"The number-one thing I learned was that it takes SO much more time than you think," she says. "Imagine being asked at 5pm to submit an essay by 9am the next day – one that would entertain and inspire people and if possible include artistically styled photographs and full references to all sources of information. That's kind of what writing my blog feels like considering I have young children and most of my writing is done after hours.

"Then there's recipe sourcing, tweaking or inventing plus All the cooking, photographing etc.

And now?

"I work on my blog every day, even the days I don't post – I'm replying to comments, emails and connecting via Facebook and Instagram," she says.

"Another important point is that my target audience changed from who I imagined them to be to who they actually are and I began to write for them rather than bang my head on my desk wondering why my posts weren't being received the way I wanted them to (the heavier reading/educational posts.) I don't see this as a bad move because I have more readers now and, as such a bigger audience for when I do choose to publish longer articles."

The basics: Design, Hosting, Content, oh my!

With an overwhelming amount of advice out there on how to get started, Katie cherry-picked the pieces that would work for her pie.

"I had read a number of blogs with posts focused on 'What I learned this year', or 'How to start a blog', and so on, and I knew that WordPress was preferred," she said. "I wanted to give my money to an Australian company so I typed "blog design Australia" into Google and found The Blog Designers (clever name guys!) who were very friendly at my first phone call and had a set price of $500 for the entire job so that was that!" (theblogdesigners.com)

"I bought a domain name, I couldn't get a .com so I went with .au. The team at The Blog Designers recommended a host so all of that techie/design stuff wasn't in my hands, which took a major load off because that 'aint my bag!

"My husband and I set up a company, Rainbird Media because he works for himself and via my blog I hope to also, so all these kind of costs can be factored in as expenses.

The next step: being seen

Blogging is never 'build it and they will come', more 'get out there and be a part of the blogosphere'. How did Katie manage that in her early days? "Follow, 'like', comment, share, recommend, email directly, stalk – ha ha! It's no different than how you connect offline," she says. "You start hanging around and then you make small talk and if you hit it off then you have new friends."

Looking back – what worked, what didn't?

Hindsight is super-useful, and it's no different with blogging. Looking back, Katie says the things she learned that she would do differently this time was to: "Write three months worth of posts and keep them in my drafts folder for rainy days. Do much more planning, recipe testing and photographing in advance. Learn about how to use WordPress, my camera and all the other gadgety bits that make blogs sexier for readers."

Katie's Top Takeaways for newbie bloggers

1. Know your specialty, you won't be able to write with oomph unless you personally dig it.

2. Pay attention to formatting and punctuation. Take a writing course if you can afford to.

3. Hang out at other blogs, get a feel for how you'd like your blog to function and look like. Whilst you're at it, make friends with the bloggers and regular readers/commentors because these are your people now!

4. Outsource design and tech support if you can afford it.

5. Allow time for it, because it's going to take time, even if it's "just" a hobby blog. But if your plans are to use it as a platform to earn money then treat it with the same respect you would an internship at the best job you could ever imagine!

You can read Katie at her blog Katie180 (including her post on how she started blogging), join her (very supportive and informative!) Facebook page here, tweet her here, or follow in Instagram here.

*We are also offering 50% off the ProBlogger Guide to Your First Week of Blogging for this week only! Enter the code BEGINNERWEEK at the checkout.

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

Beginner Week – Katie180′s success story

“ProBlogger Training Event Tickets are Available to Purchase Now” plus 1 more

“ProBlogger Training Event Tickets are Available to Purchase Now” plus 1 more

Link to @ProBlogger

ProBlogger Training Event Tickets are Available to Purchase Now

Posted: 02 Mar 2014 03:31 PM PST

In the last few minutes, tickets have gone on sale for this year's ProBlogger Training Event on the Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia on August 29-30 of this year.

NewImage

You can get your tickets here.

It's Our 5th Birthday

It's hard for me to believe but this year will be the fifth annual event that we've run.

The first was for just 100 Aussie (and 1 New Zealander) bloggers and was hastily arranged in just a few weeks. Our speaker lineup was myself, Chris Garrett, and a handful of other local speakers.

Year two we saw 200 bloggers show up and we ran a streamed event with three rooms running at any one time, and featured more international guests like Sonia Simone from CopyBlogger, and Tim Ferris (4 hour work week), as well as a growing number of bloggers making a part-time living from their blogging.

Year three we grew to 300 attendees and enjoyed the company of Chris Guillebeau, but also saw a marked increase in the number of full-time Aussie bloggers speaking at our event.

Last year saw us move the event out of Melbourne for the first time up to the Gold Coast in Queensland. We had 450 in attendance and were joined not only by international speakers like Amy Porterfield, Tsh Oxenreider, and Trey Ratcliff, but also a growing number of international attendees. We also featured 20 or so Aussie bloggers as speakers – many of whom are doing really innovative things with their blogs to build profitable businesses.

Here’s a little video recap of last year:

And so we come to 2014.

This year we've decided to keep the size to the same as last year and are keeping the event at the wonderful QT hotel on the Gold Coast. Our hope is that by limiting the size at 450 we'll retain some of the intimacy and community that we've built.

We’re supported this year by partners Tourism and Events Queensland, Virgin Australia and the QT Gold Coast.

2014 Speakers

This year I'm really excited about our speaker lineup. We're very much focusing upon putting together a schedule that gives attendees very practical and actionable advice.

Speakers

Our international speakers this year include Pat Flynn from Smart Passive Income, Rand Fishkin from Moz, Geraldine DeRuiter from Everywhereist, and Chris Ducker.

In addition to these amazing international speakers I’m very proud of our Aussie lineup, which includes Lucy Feagins (the Design Files), Chantelle Ellem (FatMumSlim), Shayne Tilley (my right hand man when it comes to Marketing), Nikki Parkinson (Styling You), Stacey Roberts (managing editor of ProBlogger), and many more that we’re continuing to announce on our speaker page.

This year tickets are $399 (that’s Aussie dollars) which includes the two full days training, morning and afternoon tea both days, lunch both days, a Friday night networking event (including your drinks and some food), recording and slides from most sessions as well as 8 months’ access to the brand new ProBlogger.com (which will be launched in the next week) which contains regular webinar teaching, some great plugins, and much more (worth over $200).

Tickets in previous years have always sold out ,so don’t delay your decision to grab one for too long as we’re unable to offer more than we do today in our first release, and we already have over 400 people on our Facebook page indicating that they’re coming.

Outside Australia?

Every year we run this event I get people from outside Australia saying that they wish they could come.

You can!

While it’s a bigger investment of time and money to fly in for this event we’re seeing more and more bloggers do it every year. In the last two years we’ve had attendees from the USA, UK, India, Malaysia, Singapore and New Zealand.

Here’s a couple of pieces of feedback I got this week from two of our wonderful international attendees from our 2014 event:

I came, I saw, I was humbled… by the passion that Darren’s team has towards helping the blogger community. The core principle that I learnt, is that ‘Our blog should make a deep personal connect with the reader, and for that to happen the blogger should be honest, transparent & truthful about what He/She blogs. ” – Prashant Karandikar from India

I thoroughly enjoyed PBEVENT in Gold Coast. I knew there was a reason why I journeyed from the U.S. Just the networking alone was totally worth it. It was great to mingle with other bloggers and understanding what makes them click in person. Plus I had a chance to learn more about that region of Australia with Tourism Australia and fellow travel bloggers. I enjoyed the speakers as well, especially Trevor Young, who gave me tips on setting up my speaker page. Thanks Darren for having the event, looking forward to the next one.” – Kerwin McKenzie from the USA.

No Virtual Tickets This Year

Please note that this year we do not intend to release a virtual ticket for this event. While we have done so in previous years to enable those not at the event to get access we’ve taken the decision this year to focus our efforts upon providing those attending the LIVE event with 100% of our attention this year.

More information on this decision on our Facebook Event Page here.

Grab Your Ticket Today Here

There’s more information our Event page here but don’t take too long to make your decision as demand this year seems to be high.

Tickets are now available for you to purchase here.

I hope to see you on the Gold Coast in August!

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

ProBlogger Training Event Tickets are Available to Purchase Now

Beginner Week: Bite the Bullet and Start Your Blog with this Seven-Point Checklist

Posted: 02 Mar 2014 08:14 AM PST

Theme WeekWelcome to ProBlogger’s second theme week – where we take a topic you’re interested in and drill right down to bring you all the information we can find to be of use to you. This week we are focusing on newbies – what do all beginner bloggers want to know? What are the first points of reference we should use, and where do we go from there? Today, please welcome Ali Luke from Zen Optimise, who has put together a handy checklist of things you should do in your first week of blogging to get yourself off the ground. There is also a fantastic deal on Darren’s “ProBlogger’s Guide to Your First Week of Blogging”, full of hints, tips and practical exercises for the beginner blogger. Even if you’ve had your blog for a while, it’s a great refresher of what really works in getting your site some traction. You will receive 50% off the purchase price when you add the discount code BEGINNERWEEK at the checkout for this week only. Don’t miss out!

Without further ado – here’s Ali.

Have you been reading ProBlogger for weeks, or even months, so you can learn everything you need to know before setting up your blog?

You might be wasting your time.

That's not to say that the content on ProBlogger isn't hugely valuable: of course it is. As a new blogger five years ago, I devoured a large chunk of the archives – and even today, I still get inspired (and pick up a few new tips) from posts here.

But I also know how easy it is to fall into the trap of reading post after post, struggling to make sense of it all, and wondering how you'll ever take in all the information out there.

"Be Prepared" Can Go Too Far 

While it's great to do some research before diving in and starting a blog, it's easy to end up reading post after post after post … without taking any action.

Until you get your blog up and running, you won't really know what you need to know. You might be reading about topics that you'll never need to concern yourself with – or you might be missing out on information that's going to be crucial.

Launching your blog can feel like a huge step. You want to get every detail right; you want it to be perfect right from the start.

The problem is, if that perfect ideal keeps you stuck, you'll never have a blog at all. And a real, imperfect blog will outperform an imaginary perfect one in every way imaginable…

Start Your Blog This Week: Your Checklist

It's time to bite the bullet. No, you probably don't feel ready. Yes, there's a lot you still don't know. But you will learn so much faster from actually blogging than from simply reading about it.

Here's what you need to do. If you tackle one task each day, you'll have your blog up and running next week:

Day 1: Set a Clear Goal

What do you want your blog to do for you? "Make money" is a popular answer – but how?

Is your blog going to support your existing business and bring in new customers?

Do you have a service to offer, like design, writing, or coding?

Is it going to be market research – and a platform – for a book that you plan to launch?

Are you going to bring in lots of traffic and sell advertising space?

Will you review products as an affiliate, taking commission on sales?

All of these are perfectly valid strategies, but you need to be clear about what you'll be doing right from the start.

Of course, your blog doesn't have to be a money-making tool. Perhaps your motivation for blogging is to get your writing out there to the world, or to build up a strong reputation in your field.

Further reading:

Top 10 Blog Monetization Strategies, Ranked In Order (Blog Marketing Academy)

To do: 

Write your goal down, and keep it somewhere visible. You want to have your goal in mind over the next few days.

Day 2: Choose a Platform

There are so many different blogging platforms out there, and there's a good chance you've heard of (and maybe tried out) a fair few of them. I'll name a handful of them: WordPress, Blogger, Typepad, Tumblr, Squarespace…

Let's make this decision easy. Your best option is almost certainly WordPress.

It's used by most of the top blogs (including ProBlogger) and it's a hugely flexible and powerful platform.

Ideally, you'll want to go with self-hosted WordPress (WordPress.org) where you install your blog on your own web space. If you can't afford hosting, though, you can use WordPress.com – this is still a powerful blogging platform, but it has certain limitations.

Further Reading:

Self Hosted WordPress.org vs. Free WordPress.com (WPBeginner)

To do:

Decide whether you're using WordPress.org (self-hosted, recommended) or WordPress.com (hosted, a good second choice).

The rest of these instructions assuming you're using WordPress.org; if you using WordPress.com or a site like Blogger, you won't need hosting, and you can choose not to buy a domain name. (If you don't buy your own domain name, you'll have one like yourname.wordpress.com.)

Day 3: Decide on Your Domain Name

Your domain name (sometimes called your URL or your web address) is what users type in to visit your site. ProBlogger's domain name is problogger.net.

To get a domain name, you need to register it with a domain name registrar – a site like GoDaddy (well known) or Namecheap (popular for its high-quality customer service).

Domain names aren't especially expensive to register, and will normally cost you around somewhere around $12 per year. Prices vary between domain name registrars, and some suffixes (the .com or .net etc) cost more than others.

When you're choosing your domain name, aim to:

Keep it fairly short. Long domain names are hard to remember and type.

Keep it to two words or fewer if possible.

Make it match the name of your website. If Darren called this site "ProBlogging Tips" but had the domain name "ProBlogger" it would be confusing for readers.

Avoid using hyphens if you can: if another website has the same domain without a hyphen, readers may end up there by mistake.

Use a .com suffix if it's available. If you really want a particular name and the .com is taken, you can use .net. If your readers are mainly from your own country, you can use your country's domain (e.g. .co.uk for the UK or .ca for Canada).

Further reading:

Five Best Domain Name Registrars (Lifehacker.com)

To do:

Come up with several possible domain names. Use WHOis.net to see which ones are available. (Simply typing them into your browser won't necessarily tell you if they're available or not, as sometimes domains are registered without hosting so no site will show up.)

If you're self-hosting WordPress and thus buying hosting, you may want to register the domain name through your host – this can make life slightly simpler.

Day 4: Buy Hosting

Many bloggers find "hosting" a tricky concept to get their heads around. Here's how it works.

For your website to be online, all the files for it need to be kept on a computer that's always connected to the internet. (It's technically possible for you to host your website on your own computer – but there are a huge number of reasons why you probably wouldn't want to do this, including security issues, and the cost of keeping your computer switched on all day and all night, all the time.)

Web host companies provide space for your site on their servers (huge computers), which are permanently connected to the internet. These servers also have special software that allows you to install WordPress on your site. You pay a monthly or annual fee for this, usually around $7 – $15 per month.

There are loads of web hosts out there; personally, I use Dreamhost for all my own websites – but I've included links to other suggestions in the further reading.

Further reading:

How to Choose the Best WordPress Hosting? (WPBeginner)

To do:

Choose your host and sign up for an account. Don't spend hours agonising over the choice – you can always switch hosts in the future if you decide they weren't the best option for you.

Day 5: Install WordPress

Assuming you've chosen a WordPress-friendly host, you'll probably have a simple and easy way to install WordPress – often with a "one-click installation" option.

Follow your host's instructions, and get WordPress installed on your site. During the installation process, you'll be prompted to enter:

The name of your site.

The username for an administrative account.

A password.

Your email address.

The only bit you can't change later is the admin username. Avoid using "admin" as that's way too easy for hackers to guess!

To login to your site, go to www.yoursitename.com/wp-login. You'll automatically be directed to your dashboard – the "behind the scenes" view of your WordPress site – after logging in.

You'll also have the option to make your site invisible to search engines. This can be reassuring while you're developing your blog, but if you switch this on, don't forget to switch it off again later! (You can do so in your WordPress dashboard under Settings Reading.

Further reading:

Secure Your WordPress Blog Without Touching Any Code (ProBlogger)

To do:

Get WordPress installed. It will probably be easier than you think! If you have time to spare, poke around in the WordPress dashboard to get a sense of all the different options and functions.

Day 6: Choose Your Theme

The look and feel of your blog is determined by its theme (sometimes called the template). You can switch your WordPress theme without losing any of your content – your posts, pages, sidebar widgets and so on are stored separately.

To change themes:

Go to your WordPress dashboard (www.yoursitename.com/wp-admin).

Click on Appearance  Themes

Choose a theme you like and click Preview to see how your site will look in that theme.

Click Activate to switch your site over to the new theme.

There are thousands of WordPress themes available online, so if you don't find anything you like in the current themes section, look around. Free themes tend to be more limited in functionality and design; premium (paid for) ones often have lots of new options.

Further reading:

How to Pick a WordPress Theme That Doesn't Suck (StuffedWeb)

To do:

Select a "good enough" theme – it doesn't have to be perfect. If you're creating a website for an existing business, consider using a premium theme that's tailored to your industry. (E.g. there are restaurant themes, band themes, guest house themes…)

Day 7: Write Your About Page

Once you've got your theme up and running, there are still a lot of tasks ahead. New bloggers often wonder what to prioritise. Getting their sidebar spruced up? Posting lots of content? Adding their "Services" page? Including an option for readers to get posts by email?

All of those are important – but one of the very first things you should do is get your About page in place.

New readers will very often look for and click on "About" (or "About me" or "About us") to find out who you are and what they can expect from your blog. If the page doesn't exist, or if it's badly put together, they might shrug and go on their way (and never return).

A good About page needs to:

Tell the reader what your blog (or company) is about and how it can help them. It's often a good idea to put this information up front, perhaps after a few words introducing yourself ("Hi, I'm Bob Jones, and I blog here about…")

Introduce you so that the reader feels a sense of connection. You can do this in a straightforward way, or with humour, with a list of interesting facts about you, with your credentials and experience, with an inspiring story … whatever fits with the tone and brand of your blog.

Include a photo of you. This isn't an absolute rule, but it helps readers come to trust you – and if you're selling them products or services, or promoting affiliate products, this is important.

Be updated regularly. Your blogging mission might change; facts about you and your life might change. If your About page is clearly years out of date, your blog is going to look cobwebby at best … and abandoned at worst.

Get the basics of your page in place, then, once you've been blogging for a couple of weeks, update it and:

Link to two or three of your best posts. This is a great way to draw readers further into your blog.

Let readers know how to subscribe to your blog by email. Even if you've got a big email sign-up box in your sidebar, readers may not notice it.

Further reading:

Are You Making These 7 Mistakes with Your About Page? (Copyblogger)

To do: 

Write your About page. You might find it easiest to split it into two sections, "About the Blog" and "About Me". If you can, ask a friend or colleague to look over it and give you feedback – they may have ideas that you wouldn't have thought of.

And that's it! Your blog isn't only online, it's looking good, and it's ready for you to publish your first post. This is just the start of an exciting journey – and I wish you all the best with it.

Ali Luke is Head of Content at Zen Optimise, where she leads small group courses on blogging and writing for the web. Once you've got your blog set up, check out 7 Rules for Creating Highly Successful Posts for powerful tips plus handy further reading suggestions.

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

Beginner Week: Bite the Bullet and Start Your Blog with this Seven-Point Checklist