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- What Bloggers Can Learn from Porn Stars
This guest post is by Brandon Yanofsky of B-List Marketing.
Admit it: blogging is an overwhelmingly confusing endeavor. There's so much to learn that, for a beginner, it can literally drive you crazy.
You need to know how to create a blog. How to properly design it. How to write well. How to write persuasively. How to market and promote your blog.
The list of things to know and do is infinite.
Am I stressing you out? Because I'm stressing myself out. There's so much involved. And yet, all the expert bloggers make it look so easy. How can that be?
They’re actually using an age old technique, made famous by notable porn stars.
If you were to watch porn (which, of course, none of us ever would), you might notice that porn stars make sex look very, very easy—at least, that's what I've been told!But behind the scenes, so they say, it's a completely different story. Apparently, life as a porn star is incredibly difficult and demanding. All day long, they’re having sex. The normal person might tire of this particular pursuit after a while, but a porn star might have to keep going for longer than eight hours—after all, that’s his or her job.
Like any actor, these movie stars might have to repeat a scene over, and over, and over again until the exact shot the director wants is captured. And yet, like any actor, the porn star doesn’t look fatigued in the finished work. They push through the exhaustion—again, that’s all part of the job.
The blogger’s job
As a blogger, you also need to learn how to push through any obstacles you face. That’s just part of your job.
There will be times when you feel like giving up—when everything seems to be going wrong. Maybe you just can't seem to get your blog past 50 visitors a month. You may start telling yourself, "I'll never make it. I should just give up."
You'll look at bloggers like Darren Rowse, and Chris Brogan, and Brian Clark, and you'll say to yourself, "Man, they have it so easy. They write a post and it's a viral sensation."
But I've heard their stories, and they don't have it any easier than you or I. Every night, they stay up late working on a new article, just like they did when they first started.
On the surface, it seems like success comes easily. But behind the scenes, they are toiling. Instead of spending weekends watching TV, they’re at their computers writing. Instead of going out for drinks on Friday nights, they are meeting on Skype to record a new podcast.
Even successful, big-time entrepreneurs like Richard Branson—who makes it seem like starting a multi-billion-dollar company is as easy as tying a shoe—will admit there were times when they considered completely giving up.
The path to success is paved with hardship. But the successful people push through.
Don't give up.
I've had clients come to me, complaining about their lack of traffic, or telling me they can't get anyone to join their email list. I ask them, "How many articles have you written?" Their response? "Well, I've been writing one a month."
"Well, start writing one a week, or even one a day. You'll see a drastic increase in traffic."
"But it's just too much work."
That attitude right there is what separates the successful from the failures. The ones like you and I who are willing to go the extra mile, to push through obstacles and never give up—we’re the ones who will succeed. We are the ones who, in another year, the beginning bloggers will look to and say, "Man, those bloggers just have it so easy." Remember to think like a porn star, and push through the exhaustion.
As an aexample, it took me days to write this article. I felt like giving up on it, but I pushed through. And now, I have an article published on ProBlogger. I pushed through the obstacle and achieved one more instance of success.
So can you. What obstacles are you pushing through?
If you'd like to read more by Brandon Yanofsky, check out his blog on small business marketing. You can also send him a tweet: @byanofsky.
Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
What Bloggers Can Learn from Porn Stars
Переслать - Efficient Blog Commenting: Save Your Time and Energy
This guest post is by Jane Sheeba of Find All Answers.
Commenting on other blogs is an integrated part of blogging, and it’s vital. You need people for successful blogging and blog commenting is one of the coolest ways to build loyal relationships.
This post is based on Joe’s guest post here at ProBlogger, where he wisely gave a strategy for commenting on other blogs. I want to add more to it, to make the strategy energy- and time-efficient.
Effective blog commenting
Commenting on other blogs can be overwhelming if you try to combine it with your regular blogging activities. Let me tell you my regular blogging activities: writing blog posts, moderating comments on my blog, replying to those comments, reading other blogs in my niche, writing guest posts, dealing with guest post submissions, dealing with paid projects, commenting on other blogs, participating in social media … you get the idea.
So even though I know the importance of commenting on other blogs, I just cannot devote a whole day to it. It’s part of my strategy, though, so I need to be efficient in my commenting. “Effificent” means working smart (rather than hard), getting more done in less in less time, and making things easy to handle.
I recently wrote about an effective blog commenting strategy at my blog, so I won’t rehash the details here. Instead, we’ll focus on making your blog commenting strategy more efficient.
Using RSS feeds and organizing them
RSS feeds are not dead! Many people use them—in fact, I prefer to subscribe to a blog via the feed before going for an email subscription. There are two reasons for this:
- Reading a blog through feeds is less distracting, even if I have email notifiers turned on.
- I don’t want to submit my email address to a blog without analyzing the content first. Reading a blog’s content via feeds help me examine the quality of the content and makes me decide if I will submit my email or not.
In fact, RSS feeds are not just for reading your favorite blogs—they will help you greatly with blog commenting. You’ll be surprised how easy it is to practice a regular blog commenting schedule via your Google reader.
I find this method to be very organized. I allocate 30 minutes every day to visit my Google reader and comment on unread posts.
There is one more benefit to it: if the feeds are full (that is, not partial feeds), you can save yourself a click. I read the post in my RSS reader, and click through to the article online only if I want to leave a comment. That saves me loads of time!
I also have added an extension to my Chrome browser that displays the number of unread items in my feeds (this is not notification, and hence no interruption to my day). For Firefox, there are a handful of extensions available to help you monitor your feed list.
Use social media, especially Twitter
I use Twitter to engage with others and promote my content. Again, commenting is about relationships first—then promotion.
I follow a tight number of people, so there is little chance that I’ll be distracted. At the time of writing this post, I have 870 followers and I’m following 60 people. Call me crazy, but I really don’t want noise on my timeline—and that’s one of the reasons I’m not being followed by masses of people. They follow me, wait for me to follow them, then unfollow me if I don’t.
I use Twitter as a tool to find good blogs to comment on. One of its advantages is that, unlike the RSS reader, where I see only the blogs I visit, Twitter helps me find new blogs.
And, if I’m impressed by the content of a blog, I can add it to my RSS subscription list and become a loyal reader and commenter. This approach has brought me some good traffic.
Use Paper.li
If you are a regular user of Twitter, you should have encountered Tweets like these:
You can create a newspaper, or “daily,” out of your participation at Twitter and Facebook. Don’t worry about creating content for your daily—it’s all automated. You don’t even have to create an account: you can use your Twitter or Facebook accounts to log in to the service.
Once you’re logged in, you can create some specifications and hastags that form the focus of your daily. A typical paper will look like this:
I skim my own daily and collect a handful of new blogs that I rapidly check out to see if they’re worth commenting on, and adding to my Google Reader. I also skim others’ papers to see if they’re following any blogs I should investigate.
How do you find these papers?
Your daily can be set to be automatically tweeted once it’s created, as the image above shows. So if you’re following your timeline, you should be easily able to capture two or three dailies that the people you’re following have created. This will introduce you to a good number of new blogs.
Use Google Alerts
Setting up Google Alerts is an efficient way to find highly targeted blogs in your niche. You could set up an alert for a particular keyword, and ask Google to notify you of only blogs that talk about that topic.
I normally set a weekly frequency for these email notifications, as daily is a bit too much for me. You can find more details about setting up Alerts here.
Focus on quality
Always focus on quality in your writing, whether it’s a blog post or a comment. I personally put the same amount of effort into writing comments as I do my blog posts.
The content is content—and it is your idea. With comments, you are providing opinion, tips, and suggestions in the same way you do in blog posts. I don’t see a real difference between them, other than length and the location of the finished content.
Your comment brands you and your business. It speaks for you. If you leave shabby, spammy, useless comments, you’ll ruin your reputation and your blog’s identity. For this reason, I don’t find it compelling or mandatory to leave a comment on every post I read. Not even on those blogs at which I am a regular reader, including ProBlogger.
Sometimes, we just don’t feel like we need to say something. In such situations, reading the post and leaving without commenting is far far better than pushing yourself to make a comment.
Do you use any of these tips already? How have you made your blog commenting strategy as efficient as possible?
Jane writes about Blogging Tips, Relationships and Self Improvement at her blog Find All Answers. You can grab your copies of “Problogging for Newbies” and “Your guide to Better Time Management” upon subscribing to her blog. She has a working strategy for successful guest posting.
Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
Efficient Blog Commenting: Save Your Time and Energy
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