Social Icons

Showing posts with label Blog Marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blog Marketing. Show all posts

Blog Marketing: Your business to success!

Author: Glenn Paul
As a young professional of 26, I stay connected on the go! My phone and laptop, with the much needed internet connection, are now my life while I work, eat, play, pray or travel! I have a virtual family and life, beyond the physical space I live in, be it work or home. So, it is no doubt, given the current scenario I also share my knowledge, learning, feedback and thoughts with the inhabitants of the virtual world on a day to day basis. The world of internet has its own charms! blog marketing is one that has me hooked! blog marketing is an amalgamation of two words and two worlds. The two words- Blog and Marketing and two worlds: the personal view and the idea of online marketing used by companies.
  • Blog provides a non-technical person, like me or you, a platform to share and interact with people on topics of mutual interest or simply write or express feelings or thoughts.
  • Blog is also a way to share my feedback about certain products I have used, services I have experienced or even my ramblings on day to day events that affect us all, global warming, war, technology etc. The latter, as a global phenomenon, has caught the eye of the marketing teams of companies.
  • Blog and internet marketing are now being combined into blog marketing and being used as a part of the marketing strategy and campaigns by small and big businesses alike. Companies are now putting people at work to write blogs about their products and services and interact with customers.
  • Blog Marketing provides the companies a collaborative platform to interact with customers and get the feedback via comments from its users about the product or service experience and their opinion on the same.

Blog Marketing while being an economical way to advertise and market needs its share of attention for detail. For one, the company needs to ensure that the blog is interactive and exciting. Starting off with blog marketing, because it was an agenda in your marketing strategy, is not a great way to kick off. You need to realize the potential of blog marketing and leverage it to the best! Keep some dedicated bloggers to ensure a continue stream of interactive blogs, response to customer's comment and also ensure the interest of customers by giving them something new and beyond business topics! Point is to be personal, real and in sync with the customer's mood and events affecting their lives.

Blog marketing provides us a platform for direct interaction with the customers and users. Blog marketing will or might garner both kinds of responses- positive and negative. At the same time, it could be a source of new product ideas, innovations and suggestions for aspects of improvement. If we use the power of blog marketing in the right manner, we can reap more benefits. We get direct feedback from our customers. We will be more visible by being more responsive and active on our own blogs and thereby improve the hits and clicks for our website and business revenue.  This would also ensure development of customer trust and loyalty over a period of time. A customer, who is well treated or helped in time through our blogs, will definitely give us a few more referrals!
Although, blog marketing leaves a lot to imagination when it comes to intangible aspects of customer interaction, as a company we need make sure that we treat each customer with respect and dignity. An angry customer/end user should be treated with utmost care. Our response should show our concern and genuine interest to help and sort out the issues of our customers and address their concerns and questions. After all, "customer is the king/queen"! A little interest, a focused approach and a genuine feeling to delight customers by associating directly with them is all you need and you could blog your business to success!

About the Author
Realize the potential of blog marketing, Please visit : www.click-labs.com


Top Link

6 Easy Blog Marketing Techniques

Author: Leo Ling
Many people having problem marketing their blogs and always have low traffic to their blogs. Actually blog marketing can be very easy if you know the techniques. I am going to teach you guys some techniques that I used to drive traffic to my blog.

1) Keep updating your blog and market it. Your reader come to your blog is want fresh information and not same old information that you posted few weeks or few months ago. This will make your readers don't want to come back to your blog since there is no new information in your blog.
2) Interview people and post it to your blog. Make sure the person you interview is related to your blog topic. Because you want your every blog post be relevant to your blog topic. Example, if your blog is about dog training, make sure you interview someone who is an owner of a dog shop or dog training instructor.
3) News related to your market. Everyone love first hand news, because this will keep them update what is going on in the market. Your readers will appreciate for your effort blogging about the current event in the market. But remember the news must be as latest as possible, nobody like to read old news that happened long ago.
4) Contests. This method not only make your blog more fun but also very good for bonding with your readers and make them keep come back to you! Make the prize you giving away is related to your market that you are promoting.
5) Good content. Make sure all your blog post is original and unique content. You will get a lot of trouble if you copied other people content without their rights. And Google will dislike your post too.
6) Comments. This is one of the best way to promote your blog. Always reply the comments that people wrote on your blog. This help to interact with your readers as well. You also can find other people's blog that is related to your blog's topic, and make some comments. This is a good ways of building traffic back to your blog.
These are the six easy blog marketing techniques you can apply to ensure that to keep your readers keep coming back and increase your traffic flow. But what is important is don't give up on what you do and consistent do it. Because result won't show within one or two days. It take weeks or even months to see the result.
Check out my personal blog, http://LeoLingHome.com, to find out how these strategies can help you make online income and other strategies that will boost your knowledge as internet marketer and boost your income.

About the Author
I'm Leo Ling, this year turning 21. You can find out how great am I by going this link:
http://leolinghome.com/category/introduction-of-me-my-site/
Have a nice day:P
CHEERS!

Top Link

Types of Keywords


When web surfers want to purchase something online, they go through three research phases. Web
surfers usually start with general keywords. After becoming more educated about a particular product
or service, they will use more specific keywords. As soon as the web surfers know what they want,
they use specific keywords.
For that reason, keywords can be divided into three types:
· Keywords for browsing
· Keywords for comparing
· Keywords for buying

1. Keywords for browsing
During the first research phase, web surfers use general keywords to find information. For example,
a web surfer might be interested in an MP3 player. The keyword that the web surfer might use in
search engines could be:
mp3 player
People who use keywords for browsing are usually looking for information only. Keywords for
browsing usually have a very high search volume. Getting a top 10 ranking for these general
keywords is very difficult and nearly impossible.

2. Keywords for comparing
In the second research phase, web surfers narrow their selection because they now know what type
of product they want. For example, the web surfer might have found out the he is interested in an
USB stick MP3 player with 1 GB flash RAM. The keywords of these web surfers are more specific:
mp3 player 1 GB
mp3 player usb stick
mp player under $100
trekstor mp3 player
samsung mp3 player
People who use keywords for comparing are more ready to buy. Comparing keywords are probably
the best keywords that you can target for your search engine optimization campaign. They often
have much lower search volume than general keywords but they will lead to more sales and it is
much easier to get top 10 rankings for these keywords.

3. Keywords for buying
During the last research phase, web surfers know what they want to purchase. They are just looking
for the web site with the best offer. For that reason, these surfers use very specific keywords:
trekstor i.beat cebrax 1 GB
trekstor i.beat cebrax 1 GB free shipping
philips SA178/07 1 GB
People who use keywords for buying are ready to buy. However, these keywords won't help you
much if you offer competing products.


Keywords for comparing are usually the keywords that work best for search engine optimization.People who use that keyword type are looking for a solution to their problem and they are ready to buy. To get best results with your search engine optimization efforts, you should concentrate on that keyword type.

How to convert visitors into buyers. lesson 4.


Step 4: Optimize your order pages

Statistics show that more than 60 percent of online shoppers abort the ordering process. If your order
page isn't easy to use, all other web site promotion efforts will be in vain.
Here are the most important points for a successful order page:
· Link from the home page and from all product and service pages to the order page.

· Give the links on your order page names that your customers can easily recognize: "Order", "Buy",
"Store", "Checkout", etc.

· Don't hide the price for your products or services. People won't buy if they don't know what they have
to pay.

· Tell your visitors about shipping costs and state taxes.

· Tell your visitors the final price before they have to enter the credit card number.

· Tell your visitors who you are and tell them your complete company address.

· Offer an unconditional money-back guarantee if at all possible.

· Tell your visitors upfront about your refund policy.

· Make sure that your order pages are secure. Use at least 40 bit encryption so that your customers
can safely enter their contact and purchase information.

· Make sure that your order pages are easy to understand. Test them with your friends or relatives
that don't connect to the Internet very often.

· Regularly test your order pages to make sure that they work.

· Make sure that you'll be notified if your server goes down.

· Make sure that your order page displays a meaningful message if the customer forgets to enter the
street name or any other required field.

· Make sure that your order pages work with international customers. German customers don't know
what to enter in the "State" field and usually leave it empty. Some countries don't even have postal
numbers. Your order pages should work for these customers.
If your order pages are easy to use and secure, they won't hinder or deter customers from completing
their purchase.


It's very important that your order pages are a secure place to shop for your customers. Use as
much encryption as you can and use the additional security services that are offered by some
credit card companies.
Our own Axandra order pages use 128 bit encryption and they also use the Verified by Visa and Master Card SecureCode service. Verified by Visa and MasterCard SecureCode are new services by Visa and MasterCard that use personal passwords or identity information to help prevent unauthorized use of credit cards.
How to find the best keywords for your web site

How to convert visitors into buyers..lesson 3


Step 3: Use powerful sales copy

It's important that your web pages are interesting to your visitors. Every visitor wants to get a prompt
answer to the question "what's in it for me?". In the first paragraph of your web page, you should tell
your visitors the following:
· what you do
· why people should stay on your site
· what's in it for your visitors
If you don't answer these questions quickly enough, people will go away.
People aren't necessarily interested in your product or in your company. You must convince your web
site visitors with good sales copy.
Before starting to write sales copy, make sure that you know your product and that you're passionate
about it. You have to fully believe in your product. If you don't, you shouldn't sell it.
You cannot write convincing sales copy if you don't stand behind your product. You must be sure that
you're doing your customers a favor by offering them your product.

· What's in it for your customers?
Your customers want benefits. What can your product do for them? What can it do for them now?
The benefits of your product should be the first words on your site. Make them bold and make them
big. If your visitors don't know what's in it for them after the first few seconds, they'll leave your site.
People don't read everything on your page. They scan it for interesting information. Grab their
attention with benefits.

· Don't mix up features and benefits
You must differentiate between features and benefits. Features are the attributes of your product,
benefits are what your product promises. For example, if you sell a solar-powered clock, then the
feature is "uses new 38/12 solar cells". The benefit to the buyer is "you save money because you
don't have to buy batteries anymore".
Don't bore your potential customers with technical details. Tell them what your product will do for
them, how they will feel when they try your product. Maybe your product or service will make them
more money, maybe it will save them time. Tell them and don't be shy.

· Killer headlines will grab your visitors attention
Nobody will read your entire page. Make it easier for your customers by dividing your page into
paragraphs where each paragraph has a headline. Your headlines should make clear what to expect
in the next sentences and they should grab your visitors' attention.
Use words like "free, proven, benefit, first, discover, complete, exclusive" and avoid words like
"should, could" and "but". Make sure that you use "you" more than "I" or "we". Remember: Your
customers don't really care about you and your business. They only want to know what's in for them.

· End your sales copy by telling the reader what to do
At the end of your copy text, you must tell your visitors what to do next, for example "Click here to
order now for immediate delivery".

How to convert visitors into buyers. lesson 4.

How to convert visitors into buyers..lesson 2


Step 2: Create trust

It's very important that your web site visitors have trust and confidence in your company. Your
customers must trust you. They won't buy from you if they don't.

· Make sure that your web pages have a professional design
Your web pages have to look perfect. If necessary, hire a professional web designer. Don't use
blinking text, funny animations or flashy banners on your page. Make sure that all links on your web
site are intact.
Don't use automatically created web pages. Some software programs allow you to automatically
create pages that are "optimized" for a special keyword. These doorway pages don't work anymore
on search engines (its simply spamming).
In addition, human web surfers are turned away by that kind of pages. While doorway pages might
look attractive to software programs, web surfers usually hate them.
Automatically created doorway pages usually look ugly to human web surfers. Often, they consist of
nothing more than a list of buzz-words. You won't get good results with this method because human
web surfers will quickly close such a web page.

· Tell your web site visitors who you are
Make sure that customers know that a real person is sitting behind this web page. Include your full
contact information on your web site and make it easy to find.
If your visitors don't know from whom they will purchase and how to contact you, they won't buy
anything. Show your privacy policy.

· Offer free trials and show your refund policy
The most common way that companies use to establish trustworthiness is to offer a free trial and a
money back guarantee. If your customers know what they'll get, they'll be more likely to purchase.

· Use testimonials
Its far better if other people say nice things about you than you saying nice things about yourself.
Testimonials from satisfied customers will show how your business can do a better job than your
competitor when it comes to customer satisfaction.

How to convert visitors into buyers..lesson 3

How to convert visitors into buyers..lesson 1


Even if you have obtained high search engine rankings for your web site under your important
keywords, and even if you have hundreds of visitors per day, web surfers still might not purchase
anything on your web site.
Why do visitors sometimes not convert into sales? We'll give you several ways that can increase the
number of surfers that will become buyers on your web site.


Step 1: Accelerate your web pages
Web surfers hate to wait for slow loading web pages. If your web pages don't load fast enough, many
web surfers will go away without taking a look at them.
No matter how great your product is: if your web site is not fast enough, web surfers won't see it. Fast
loading web pages are crucial if you want to sell something on the Internet.
There are several things you can do to speed up your site. Of course, you should make sure that your
web host provides fast and reliable servers. In addition to hosting your web site on a fast server, you
can do the following to improve the loading time of your web pages:

· Reduce the number of graphics
A large number of graphics on your web pages can considerably slow down your page. For each
graphic on your web page, the web browser has to make another connection to your server.
If you cannot reduce the number of graphics on your web page, then try to combine several graphics
to a single bigger one. Use the same graphics on your other web pages so that web browsers can
load the graphics from the browser cache.

· Specify the dimensions of your graphics
Always make sure to include the height and width dimensions of your graphics in your HTML code.
This means that every IMG tag should have the WIDTH and HEIGHT attributes specified.
If web browsers don't have to figure out the dimensions of your graphics, they can already display
placeholders and start displaying the text of your web page before loading the graphics from the
server.
· Make the top of your page interesting
If a web page takes a long time to load, make sure that the top of the page contains something
interesting because visitors will see that part first.

· Divide your tables
Web pages that use a single large layout table take a long time to render in web browsers. Break up
huge tables into several smaller ones.

· Specify the dimensions of your tables
If you specify the WIDTH and HEIGHT attributes for your tables, then web browsers don't have to
load the complete table code to calculate the dimensions of the table.

· Double check cell widths
Take a moment to check the individual widths of each table cell. If the total is more than the
specified table width, then web browsers will have problems displaying your table.
It's important to know the download times of your web pages. In general, your home page should load
in 20 seconds on a dial-up connection and the top of your page should be displayed within 5-8
seconds.

Fast loading web pages are the most basic factor of a successful web site. If your web pages are displayed and rendered as quickly as possible, people will have more time to read the actual content of your web pages and eventually they'll buy something on your page.


How to convert visitors into buyers..lesson 2

How to Follow Up With a Blogger (Without Being Annoying!)

When it comes to outreach, following up is tricky but often necessary.
You probably work on  tight deadlines, and so do the bloggers and publishers you’re trying to connect with. When everyone in the situation is pressed for time, emails and calls can easily go unanswered.
Having a plan for how to proceed when you need an answer will make your outreach more efficient and can actually improve your results.  But sending a follow up does more than get a response, it also:
Maintains and strengthens the relationshipDemonstrates a high level of commitment on your partShows how much you want to work with that blogger
In this post, I’ll explain when you need to follow up on your outreach efforts and the most effective ways to go about it…
Knowing when you should follow up is a careful balance between coming across as too aggressive and missing a deadline. Below are a few common situations when you’ll need to follow up…
Let’s say you have one month until the publication date. You’ve pitched to several bloggers, but you haven’t heard back yet.
In this case, emailing every day or so is unnecessary, annoying, and risks putting you on their blocked list. But if you wait too long to follow up, they may forget who you are and what you said in your initial pitch.

Instead, send them a follow up email a week after your initial email. If you’re working on a tighter deadline, adjust this time accordingly. But for anything longer than a month, waiting a week to respond is a good rule of thumb.
Once you have built the relationship, pitched a blogger, and they’ve agreed to work with you, there’s a chance you will need to nudge them along at some point in order to meet your deadlines.
When a blogger first agrees to work with you, be clear on the timeline for when you will need your content published. You can then work your follow ups around this end date. Set this expectation up front, and the blogger won’t feel rushed or surprised when they hear from you.
If you’re creating a piece of content in collaboration with the blogger, follow up with updates on where the content is at in production and to solicit their feedback along the way. Keeping this constant line of communication open will help strengthen your relationship.
You’ve pitched a piece of content to a blogger and they respond with a list of changes that can’t be done or aren’t the best fit for your piece. A response, even if it’s “thank you for your time and feedback” is better than no response at all.
Let them know you appreciate their feedback and you’ll alert the team who created the content (and then actually alert them, especially if it’s a factual error).
You should also consider making their suggested changes if they will actually make your content better and makes the difference between whether or not this particular blogger will place the content.
This is a mistake many make: not sending a response after you’re flat out told “no.”
Don’t ignore someone even if you don’t get the reply you hoped for, as there may still be an opportunity for you to further the relationship and work with them in the future.
There are several reasons they may decline your pitch, but may still be open to a continued relationship:
The piece of content doesn’t fit in with their current editorial calendarThey’ve already covered the topic in the recent pastIt’s not a good fit for their audienceThey don’t publish the type of content you’re pitching them (for example, infographics or guest posts)
If the blogger declines to share your content for any of the above reasons (and they will most likely tell you why), you should still follow up with them from time to time and offer other content for them to share. Sometimes they will even ask you to send them more content in the future, so it’s important to keep in touch!
Your content has been published by a blogger and it’s been a huge success (congratulations!). In your excitement over a successful placement, don’t forget to show your gratitude.
Now it’s time to follow up and say thank you, let them know any efforts you’ve made to promote the piece, and mention you’ll be in touch regarding future opportunities.
Now that you know when you need to follow up, below are some ideas for what to include in your follow up to make it stand out and elicit a response…
Remind the blogger how your content will benefit them and their readers (you already did that in your pitch, right? ;) ). If they don’t see what’s in it for them, they won’t have a reason to share your content.
Refer back to a previous conversation. If the blogger mentioned they would publish your content in a week, remind them of this in your follow up email. This will require keeping notes of your conversation.
Reference one of their recent posts or social media updates that resonated with you. Something like, “How was your vacation?” or “I really enjoyed reading  your recent post about your new DIY project!” shows you’re keeping up with them.
You don’t always have to use email when following up. Instead, reach out through social media. For example, sending a tweet that you’ve sent them an email is a less intrusive way to get their attention. This can also possibly spur them to read your email right away.
Whether you’re following up after your initial pitch or after a piece of content has been published, collecting a blogger’s feedback will help you better understand what they want in future collaborations. Simply note how valuable their feedback is to you and how your outreach is a collaborative effort. Being asked for their opinion may ultimately prompt them to hit “reply.”
Many people resist following up out of fear they’ll be seen as a nuisance, but sending a follow up email can be what differentiates you from others. By using some of the ideas above, you can show you’re committed and persistent without being a pest.
Following up doesn’t end when a blogger agrees to share your content. Follow through is just as important as following up. Once they place your content, continue the relationship with them by sharing their content on social media with meaningful feedback  and commenting on their posts. This will also keep you in the forefront of their mind and help strengthen your relationship
What are other effective ways of following up for blogger outreach?
Get unfiltered SEO info from Greg Boser, cutting-edge marketing and PR tips from Chris Winfield, and so much more from the rest of the BlueGlass team.The insider perspective on the latest Internet Marketing news.Get deep discounts and other cool goodies for the best software, tools, websites and conferences out there.Be the first to know about BlueGlass conferences, meetups, and surprise releases.Learn what the hottest new tools, plugins, & extensions are as our team delivers three to you each time!Oh yea, this is all FREE!

How to Turn Your Blog Into a Link Generation Machine

With that comes the immeasurable benefits: serving content to your specific audience and catering to what they’re interested in, indirectly selling to your audience, and sharing your brand’s voice.
Then there are the measurable benefits: page views, link generation, conversions and leads.
Once you’ve decided to continue blogging for your business and you’ve created content your audience wants to consume, how can you use that for link generation or content curation beyond what you’re already doing?
When you look at how the landscape has changed over the past few months, it’s clear that you shouldn’t just be blogging to write. You should be blogging with intention, attempting to understand what’s performing well and what drives users to share your content. This will create a true community on-site and off-site.
The ever-growing importance of both on-site and off-site optimization was truly brought to the forefront by Panda and Penguin. Having a blog with high engagement signals and quality links will make you a brand that floats along the river with some waves, instead of white water rafting when a penalty or algorithm change rolls out.
There are a few things to remember here:
Be aware of your content performance ratio. If you have a high amount of pages and posts within your site with low engagement signals and links, it has the potential to negatively impact your site.Links from irrelevant, low quality sites with little to no engagement (some of the off-site factors mentioned above) no longer carry weight and viability in the long run.Content syndication is a natural by-product of blogging. What matters is the relevance and authority of the sites sharing your piece.There’s a degeneration of the weight of exact match anchor text as a ranking factor. It’s continuing to move toward semantic relationships, variations, intent and context.Relevancy and quality links have always been important for building up authority to your site, but it’s also something that gets neglected on a smaller budget with less time. Invest the time now to prevent problems later.
Growing a blog organically allows a reverse type of link building to occur. You’re not necessarily spending the majority of your time contributing elsewhere to gain quality links, but rather those who find interest in your content are sharing and linking to you.
What happens when you try to share content with and reach an audience that doesn’t exist?
…basically nothing.

There does need to be an audience already existing or starting to form. This isn’t an “if you build it, they will come” scenario. While it’s true you have to start somewhere, your ultimate goal is to attract readers, and foster their trust and loyalty by giving them what it is they found interesting in the first place. It takes dedication to move from a new blog to one that’s naturally attracting attention, mentions and links.
Once you have an established audience and understand their specific demographic, interests, wants and needs, you’re on the cusp of  organic link generation.  While not being in control of the types of links that are pointing to your content can be intimidating, one of the keys to a diversified, organic backlink portfolio is allowing your content to snowball and mobilize across the web.
You might get a mixture of:
High quality and authority domainsLower authority domains with high audience engagementNofollow linksDirect linksCocitation linksHaving a wide variety of links in your profile without carefully curated anchor text might seem counter-intuitive to some, but it’s an important step to neutralize your portfolio, dilute any aggressive behavior that might be in your site’s history, and gain links from relevant sites. These particular links often come from sites that are related to the content that you’ve published, sending a stronger signal to the search engines as to the relevance and overall theme of the site in general.
Something can be shared socially until the cows come home, but you need to ask yourself, “what’s the by-product of all of this social sharing?”
Are people taking the time to use this post as a resource in their own content, or are they simply reading the headline that comes through their stream and carelessly clicking the retweet button? Is it sparking inspiration in others and encouraging them to cover a similar topic?
The great thing about reaching a targeted audience that’s active across various social channels and may maintain their own blog as well, is that the sharing and links that you gain from that particular audience has a wider reach. In turn, this increases the visibility of your piece of content.
Take the Grammar Goofs infographic posted a few months ago on CopyBlogger. That particular infographic was shared among writers, bloggers, and educators.
Take a look at the social sharing metrics:

It’s clear that this particular infographic reached the sweet spot of interest for this particular audience. While you could judge the success on the social metrics alone, the link generation numbers are high as well.
Why might this have performed so well?
Strong newsletter subscription baseHighly on topic for this specific audienceEasily shareable with an embed codeExtensive social reachIt’s content people want to link toIt’s normal that blogs have a higher than average bounce rate because those who land on a blog post are usually in the process of researching something or looking for news and updates. If you can pull them in with the initial post they land on, there’s the chance that they’ll explore more of your content and take more time to understand your brand.
Are you improving at an increasing rate? What categories and topics tend to attract the most backlinks?
These are simple metrics that help you understand what types of topics inspire others or fill a gap, which encourages others to use your content as a source or to link back to it.
Like you might measure link velocity and view your link aggregation metrics for your site, you should also consider measuring and monitoring the trend of average links and social metrics generated per post.
One great tool for this is Majestic SEO:
The Fresh index allows you to grab a pull of the link counts per individual blog postDrop the past 20 blog post URLs into the bulk backlink checkerExport the data and focus on the amount of backlinks and referring domains data into ExcelPull an average for each of these to understand the average amount of backlinks and referring domains that each post generates Generate a trend line to view whether the data is generally increasing, or increasing at a decreasing rate
You can do the same thing for social metrics. If you don’t want to aggregate by hand, you can use a tool called SharedCount:
Pull the same URLs into SharedCount that you were analyzing in MajesticUse the multiple URL uploader to add each URL in for analysisExport the resultsGenerate a per-post average
Pulling this kind of data will also allow you to see what posts were performing the best outside of analytics and pure sharing metrics. Sometimes a post can perform extremely well socially, but isn’t generating any links. You might also find that certain topics garner an extensive amount of page views, but a different topic is actually attracting links and mentions on other blogs in your vertical.
Tapping into your analytics, even at a basic level, is important for sculpting content around what people who come to your site are querying. It also allows you to find holes in categories that might present themselves as opportunities for fresh content, and gives you insight to what those who aren’t current readers to your site are looking for.
If you’re finding that a certain category or group of queries is appearing consistently:
What specific categories are the queries falling into?Are they transactional queries? Information queries?Is there a content gap for these particular queries that this post could fill?Do you have the ability to do firsthand research on this topic?
Asking the above questions can help you create a content roadmap that fills a need for those coming to your site, and opens the door to harness new readership and engagement. It’s not enough to regurgitate content that’s already out there in your vertical. If you’re offering something fresh and relevant that fills an untapped need, you’re more likely to have consistent readership that finds value in what you’re sharing.
If you find there are unanswered questions you can help research, performing firsthand research on the front lines can allow you to reach out to other blogs that might be able to cite your content as a resource. This research doesn’t have to be limited to your brand alone; you can tap into other business or blog owners for their insights to include in your post.
Understanding what encourages others to share your content off-site is essential to building your audience and your brand’s reach.
While building the authority of your blog,  remember these key things:
Is your content shareable? Is it interesting enough where it can be mobilized off-site rather than simply garnering comments and social shares?What topics are consistently performing well on your site and generating links?What are your readers looking for when they come to your site? Is there a gap in content or an opportunity to use firsthand research to gather information to fill that gap?
What are some ways that you track your content to create pieces that can generate interest off-site?
Get unfiltered SEO info from Greg Boser, cutting-edge marketing and PR tips from Chris Winfield, and so much more from the rest of the BlueGlass team.The insider perspective on the latest Internet Marketing news.Get deep discounts and other cool goodies for the best software, tools, websites and conferences out there.Be the first to know about BlueGlass conferences, meetups, and surprise releases.Learn what the hottest new tools, plugins, & extensions are as our team delivers three to you each time!Oh yea, this is all FREE!

10 Free Tools Every Business Blogger Should Bookmark


As a business blogger, most of the tools you need to do your job live right up there in your noggin. Do you understand the subject matter you're writing about? Can you string together a sentence? Got a computer?
You're pretty much good to go.
But (isn't there always a but?) you can make your job a heck of a lot easier -- and your blog posts even better -- if you have a supplemental arsenal of tools. And to make up for that "but" I just threw down, I've got some good news for you ... all these tools are totally free. Woo hoo!
Alright, you ready to start bookmarking? Here are 10 free tools that will make you a better business blogger, and how to use them.
Setting up an RSS is the first thing every business blogger should do, because it helps provide topic fodder for your blog and quickly identify industry news content you should be blogging about. There are plenty of different feed readers out there you can use to subscribe to various website feeds -- I use Google Reader myself, because it's easy to simply enter a search term about which I'd like to receive updates, and click the 'Subscribe' button:

As you amass amazing websites to subscribe to in your reader, wake up each morning and scan that content for topic inspiration and newsjacking opportunities -- you'll never hurt for blog content again!
Every blog post you write should have at least one image, but bloggers often face a dilemma when searching for it -- they don't have the time or inclination to create their own image from scratch, they don't want to pay for stock images, and it's hard to tell if they're allowed to use an image from an ordinary Google search. Creative Commons to the rescue!

Creative Commons lets you search for images for your blog post, and filter only the photos that you are allowed to "use for commercial purposes," and, if you so choose, "modify, adapt, or build upon." You see that awesome LEGO man in the top right corner of this post, for example? Found it on Creative Commons. You can search sites like Flickr, Fotopedia, Pixabay, and Google Images for your images -- just be sure to give attribution somewhere within your blog post to the original artist, and a link back to their page!
I'm sure one of the reasons you're blogging is to dominate the SERPs -- and you're probably targeting certain keyword phrases over others in order to do that. But how do you know what keywords to target if you don't know their search volume and competitiveness? Here at HubSpot, we use our own keyword tool to look up that information to inform our blogging, but if you don't have a subscription to HubSpot software, you can use Google's Keyword Tool.

Simply type in a search term or phrase, and Google's Keyword Tool will return estimated search traffic and level of competitiveness so you can determine whether you should attempt to rank for that term or phrase. You won't be able to track things like inbound links, keyword performance over time, and how your rankings compare to competitors, but you will be able to identify which keywords are best to target in your content creation!

Many people aren't aware that LinkedIn actually has a free polling feature for groups. It's fantastic for bloggers, because it lets you conduct market research on the fly to a highly targeted group of people. And unless a group administrator has restricted the polling ability for their group, you can actually run a poll in any group, even if you're not an administrator! So next time you're stuck for blog content or simply need some original data for your post, head over to LinkedIn, go to the 'Discussions' section of a group, and run a poll to get the information you need!

If you aren't interested in generating original data for your post with LinkedIn Polls but you do need a data point to back up your claims, leverage data-rich websites and the "site:search" functionality to find the information you need. Here's how it works.
Think of the data point you need, and an industry website that publishes that type of data -- we love data from eMarketer, for example. Then head over to Google, and type in the following:

Typing in "site:website.com" restricts your search to only the website you enter (be sure not to put "www" in front of the domain name, and use no space between "site:" and the website you enter). Google will then search for the phrase you entered after it -- in the example above, the search is for "facebook sponsored stories effectiveness" -- only on that website. So instead of scanning the entire web for data points and sifting through a bunch of bunk, you can restrict your search to just one website that you know publishes quality research in your industry.
Click to Tweet is a tool that lets you generate a tweetable link for your readers to, well, tweet your content. Not sure what I'm talking about? Check it out ... when a reader clicks that orange, hyperlinked "Tweet This Stat" anchor text while in the blog post ...

... this screen pops up.

Now you know what I'm talking about, right? Click to Tweet is the easy (free!) tool that makes it possible for readers to tweet out your content with tweet copy you predefine. Just type out the copy you'd like to appear in the tweet box when a reader clicks to tweet your content, click 'Generate Link,' and hyperlink anchor text within your blog post with that link to increase social shares of your content!

Sometimes, words just aren't sufficient to make your point as a business blogger, and you need to pull in the power of video. Thing is, you're not a video editor, and you don't have all the fancy shmancy equipment to do the job. No problem! There are free, extremely user-friendly video editing programs out there that can help you edit your video footage for your blog posts. Our very own internal video guy recommends iMovie for Mac users, and Windows Movie Maker for PC users. And you're in luck, they've both written clear guides on how to use the programs! Click here for the Windows Movie Maker user guide, and visit this page for a series of iMovie tutorial videos.
This one will be short and sweet. If you're not using dictionary.com to ensure you're using proper spelling and grammar, start today. Your readers will appreciate it. You should even copy and paste your content into a word processor and run it through a spell check before publishing, just to ensure you haven't missed any little errors that come up when drafting content.
Then head over to Thesaurus.com, which will become your best friend when trying to nail down the perfect title for your blog post. Invest time in finding compelling words for your title -- the more interesting your language, the more click-throughs you'll receive. Consider the title of the blog post we published this morning, for example. Would you rather read "9 Pet Peeves to Avoid in Your Pinterest Marketing," or "9 Things to Avoid in Your Pinterest Marketing"?  Pet peeves are a bit more compelling than generic "things" don't you think? That's what a thesaurus is good for ... helping you identify the best, most compelling words for your blog post title!
Whether working with guest bloggers, contributing to other blogs, or receiving feedback from an editor, business bloggers have to be excellent collaborators. Google Docs and the Comments function help everyone stay on the same page as content goes through multiple rounds of revisions.
If you've never used Google Docs, go to 'Drive' at the top of your Google account (if you can't find it, simply click the 'More' button in your navigation and it will be among the listed apps), click 'Create,' and select 'Document.'

Then simply start writing! When you're done, you can share it with other people, who can then write comments to help you with the editing and revision process. Much like Facebook, you can comment on those comments, and even click the blue 'Resolve' button on each comment as you take the feedback!

Marketing Grader is a free, web-based tool we developed to help you grade all the areas of your marketing -- top of the funnel, middle of the funnel, and analytics. And part of that top of the funnel analysis is the effectiveness of your business blog. After all, what's the point of all this blogging if you're not evaluating your progress? That's what Marketing Grader helps you do! Here's how you use it. Go to marketing.grader.com, enter your website, a competitor or two, your email address, and click 'Generate Report.'

Then, you'll be taken to a screen with reports for the top of your funnel (which is where you'll learn about improving your blogging), the middle of your funnel, and analytics. Click on the Top of the Funnel report to get your top 3 action items to improve your ToFu performance and learn more about what's working for your blog, and what isn't.

Oh look! You're killing it with the content frequency on your blog, but having trouble generating social shares. Did you know that? Now you do. Know how to fix it? Marketing Grader tells you that, too.

If you haven't set up your blog yet but are ready to get started with business blogging, there are plenty of free tools to set up your first blog, too. The most popiular is WordPress, and if you ever decide to jump on the HubSpot train, we even have a WordPress integration ready and waiting for you!
What other free tools out there have helped you be a better business blogger?
Image credit: V&A Steamworks



Blog Marketing



Top Link