Archive for the ‘blogs and rss’ Category

What Is Online Marketing? – The Series

Thursday, June 1st, 2006

I just finished a series of articles on the basics of online marketing for WritersWeekly.com, the freelance writing site we own:

# What Is Online Marketing? – Part 1 of 6
http://www.writersweekly.com/this_weeks_article/003402_04262006.html

# What Is Online Marketing? – Part 2 of 6: The Web Site
http://www.writersweekly.com/this_weeks_article/003419_05032006.html

# What Is Online Marketing? – Part 3 of 6: Search Engine/Directory Registration
http://www.writersweekly.com/this_weeks_article/003431_05102006.html

# What Is Online Marketing? – Part 4 of 6: Getting Links
http://www.writersweekly.com/this_weeks_article/003443_05172006.html

# What Is Online Marketing? – Part 5 of 6: Joining The Discussion
http://www.writersweekly.com/this_weeks_article/003450_05242006.html

# What Is Online Marketing? – Part 6 of 6: Online Advertising
http://www.writersweekly.com/this_weeks_article/003467_05312006.html

Reader Question: Article Syndication

Friday, May 5th, 2006

Hi Richard,

I am enjoying your articles about online marketing. Glad to hear it takes a year to see results, because I thought I was doing something wrong when it didn’t work right away.

What do you think about article syndication to promote one’s blog or
website?

Lynne Taetzsch
http://www.artbylt.com

I think it can be a good idea.

The only problem I’ve can think of, though not experienced directly, is that of duplicate content in the search engines.

Search engines hate duplicate content. If the same article is on on a bunch of different sites, the search engines could interpret that as duplicate content.

If it is on just a handful of other sites, though, I don’t think it makes much of a difference.

You might want to put a disclaimer on the article that says something like:

“If you want to reprint this article, you can do so for free. But email: XYZ-at-SomeISP.com and let me know where you’re going to run it.”

That way you have some knowledge about who is using it.

Regarding syndicating blog content, the standard way to do that is through RSS. Most blog software creates the file automatically.

This site here has places to register RSS feeds:

http://www.masternewmedia.org/rss/top55/

Blog Blast

Friday, January 20th, 2006

Sorry for the long delay between posts. I’m failing to heed my own advice.

Once of our authors at Booklocker.com sent an email asking about a piece of software called Blog Blast, which promises to place your ad on 2 million sites.

As a veteran of the online marketing world, when I hear about software like this I’m immediately skeptical. If it was really that easy, everyone would be doing it.

So when I investigated, I wasn’t too surprised to find out it is not legit.

Blog Blast is a tool for doing comment spam – basically placing fake comments containing your link on random blogs.

The “theory” behind comment spam is that these postings will appear to search engines as a link to your site from the blogs in question. Among other things, search engines look at how many sites are linking to your site. So this practice should raise your visibility in the search engines.

And for a while it did work, until the search engines got wise to it.

Today search engines look at the quality of the sites that are linking to your site. A bunch of links from low-quality, irrelevant sites actually hurts your search engine ranking. Plus, comment spam is so prevalent (this modest blog alone gets about 50 per day) that most blogging software packages have systems built-in to block it. So not only is this software doing something unethical, any comments Blog Blast does submit are just going to be blocked anyway.

For more opinions on this particular tool, see:

http://chrisbloor.com/blog/?p=29
http://zog.typepad.com/malaysia/2005/11/blog_blaster_he.html
http://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/ripoff166722.htm
http://www.thedeadhand.com/blogs/jscroft/archive/2005/11/27/14163.aspx

Blogs Are Still Useful Even If They Aren’t Under Their Own Domain

Monday, December 5th, 2005

In a recent comment on a past post, Pam of Nerds Eye View wrote:

Another note I’d like to share – I read an article recently that emphatically stated you should host your own domain if your blog is a self-promotion tool. They liked using a yourblog.typepad.com or yourblog.blogger.com to using Hotmail for your business email. Your mention of publishing via FTP is the way to get around this.

In case I wasn’t clear, it is always the best situation when you host a blog/site under your own domain. Moreover, there is evidence that at least Google factors in the length of time you’ve had the domain registered, as well as the length of time you register a new domain for. So a domain registered in 1995 would carry a lot more weight than one registered in 2005. And a site registered today for 10 years carries more weight than once registered for just a year.

Unfortunately, though, registering a domain, editing the DNS record so it points to the right server, and putting up some HTML pages so a web site works is confusing for many people. That should not be a roadblock to creating a blog.

One can overcome the advantage of owning your own domain simply by creating good content on a regular basis. This is the factor that trumps everything. Focus on producing good content (detailed information that isn’t replicated on some other site). From that, work on getting people to read and link to it. If you can do that, then good search engine exposure will follow.

For example, we have several sites that are subdomains under booklocker.com and they get indexed just fine. We even have an author blog under our old system, which organized them as directories under a subdomain, and it ranks well. It is even recognized as a Forbes Best Of The Web pick.

So to put it simply, do a blog under your own domain if you can. (TypePad has a nice feature called Domain Mapping that gives you the benefits without the hassle and Blogger lets you FTP to other servers.) If you just can’t figure it out, don’t let that stop you. Blogs are still useful when hosted under a subdomain. And it is certainly a much, much better situation than doing nothing at all.

Reader Questions: What Blog Service Do You Recommend?

Tuesday, November 29th, 2005

What blog site would you recommend. I currently have a blog on Bloglines.com

http://www.bloglines.com/blog/KevinKingston it’s called, “The Real Estate Investors Blog” I find the format very easy to work with but am concerned that it is a bit tough for people to subscribe to. So I was just wondering if you guys knew of a Blog site that may be easy to subscribe to or even have some type of e-zine format or e-mail alert feature.

Thanks in advance!
Kevin Kingston

I’m not that familiar with Blogline’s service, to be honest.

There are really two types of blogging systems – software you host yourself on your web server and services that host the blog for you.

Software You Host

At BookLocker, we use WordPress to manage all our blogs. This is software you install on your own server. The default installation only allows you to create one blog. We’ve modified our version to allow for the creation of multiple blogs so we can offer these to our authors at no cost.

We also create our blogs under BookLocker subdomains. For example, this blog is under the URL: http://marketing.booklocker.com/. We could have put it under the URL http://www.booklocker.com/marketing. (In fact, it was under that URL for a while.) But it has been our experience that search engines more easily index subdomains. So Bloglines is probably not doing you any favors hosting your blog under its main URL.

Here are some of the more active BookLocker author blogs:

http://travel.booklocker.com/
http://exploringseventies.booklocker.com/
http://appalachian.booklocker.com/

Prior to WordPress, we used a piece of software called MovableType. It is a fabulous piece of software. In fact, our oldest and most popular author blog is still on it (we haven’t transitioned it to the new system yet). But MovableType made a change in the way they charge for the software – it is now per author – so the licensing for us was cost prohibitive given that we wanted to offer blogs to all our authors.

Hosted Blogging Services

Services that host the blog for you are what most people use. I usually recommend two options:

1.) TypePad – this is the hosted version MovableType, the software I discussed above. It costs money, but it is probably the best service out there. You should spring for the Pro version ($149.50 per year) because it offers the most flexibility.

2.) Blogger – this is a free service. Google owns it now. The trade-off for getting a blog for free is that Google runs ads on your blog. You can pay to have the ads removed. But if you are going to pay, I’d recommend just going with TypePad. It has more features for the money.

UPDATE: Jan Price writes: ” I am just reading your newletter and notice in the marketing blog your husband is hosting has some misinformation included. I use blogger and it does NOT run ads on my blogs. There is an option to add adsense or something but I haven’t yet run across any sites using it, thankfully.” – Thanks, Jan. Blogger did run ads on the free version at one time, but Google must have changed that policy.

A new hosted service to come on the scene is WordPress.com – a hosted version of the software we use. I’ve never played with it, but I imagine it works exactly like our version. It is free, so you might want to check it out as an option instead of Blogger.

Regarding your question about “subscribing”, what you are referring to is subscribing to the RSS feed of the blog. I’ve described RSS Feeds before, but an RSS feed is essentially a special URL that contains a list of the most recent posts on your blog. By monitoring that file with special software or through special web sites, a person can see when you add new content to your blog without having to visit it every day.

I read a study recently that only 12% of the Internet population uses RSS. That isn’t surprising because, as you touch on in your question, accessing RSS feeds requires jumping over a few technical hurdles.

First off, you need some sort of feed reader (also known as a feed aggregator) – that is the software or service that monitors RSS feeds and notifies you when sites get updated.

Here are comprehensive lists of feed readers for Windows and Mac. Some are free, but many cost money.

Bloglines, the service you are using to manage your blog, also doubles as a web-based feed reading service.

There is talk that the new version of Internet Explorer will have feed reading built in. Mac users already have this with their browser – Safari. And if you are a FireFox user, the feature is known as Live Bookmarks.

Anyway, for the average user it is pretty confusing. Which is probably why only 12% use RSS feeds.

I’ve recently found a service that basically emails you when a blog is updated. Blog owners can offer this to their readers. I have it on this blog (you can see the blank on the right under the heading “Enter Email Address:”. It is called FeedBlitz . The basic service is free. You can subscribe to the pay service to customize the emails that are sent out.

If you decide to add FeedBlitz to your blog, you can add it via the FeedBurner service. FeedBurner allows you to monitor who subscribes to your RSS feed, as well as add all sorts of neat features to enhance it.