Tag: how to promote your blog

  • Skip the Guest Posts: Here’s How to Promote Your Blog

    Skip the Guest Posts: Here’s How to Promote Your Blog

    Know what’s even better than guest posting on a popular blog?

    Getting mentioned or featured by a popular blogger, with a link back to your blog.

    When you have an expert link to you on their blog and say, “Hey, look at this valuable info,” you are golden. No hours of sweating a topic and writing a draft necessary!

    Essentially, a guest post is you promoting yourself on someone else’s platform.

    By contrast, a mention from a top blogger is a recommendation from someone with thousands of loyal followers.

    Which would you rather have? I thought so.

    But there’s a catch: How can you — as a blogger who’s starting out, or has just a small audience — do something noteworthy enough to earn these valuable mentions and links?

    Quick answer: Study what others do in your niche, think about what your readers need most — and then find a way to stand out. Bust a major move.

    You can do it! I know, because I started as a total blogging newbie, and didn’t know any big bloggers. But I managed to get mentioned on many of the top sites in my niche.

    Here are four things I did that helped me get those prized backlinks:

    1. Enter contests

    Whenever you see contests for bloggers, enter.

    In fact, start writing posts with the express purpose of winning contests you know are coming up! Contests are a terrific way to gain a ton of exposure to new readers quickly.

    My blog’s audience skyrocketed at the end of 2010, when I entered the Top 10 Blogs for Writers contest on Write to Done. Readers nominate you, which creates backlinks on Write to Done, even for those who don’t eventually win!

    When I won, that created another backlink and drove more traffic.

    In all, the contest created a major traffic surge for my blog. You can see in the chart below that my blog had only modest traffic before the contest win — 200-300 views a day (I didn’t have Google analytics until November 2010, so the figures start there).

    Soon, I began seeing many days above 1,000 views:

    Carol1.jpg

    With new readers arriving who’d seen the contest link, a couple of blog posts in January and February created similar spikes. Years later, when I analyze my biggest sources of blog traffic, I can still see a steady stream of new readers from my contest wins.

    Writer’s Market has a whole section on contests, and you can Google “blogging contests” to find many online.

    Note: I’m NOT talking about the scammy types of contests where you pay a stiff fee to enter. There are plenty of free or very-low-cost contests, so concentrate on those.

    2. Do something different

    One of the first things I did on my blog was start a petition writers could sign vowing they wouldn’t write a blog post for $15 or less. It was sort of a crazy idea, but it got readers taking action — or talking about why they wouldn’t sign.

    It was something different, and it got some mentions on other blogs.

    I got a taste of what standing out could do for me, and looked to take it a step further.

    In late 2010, I made a decision that if my blog was all about fair pay for writers, I needed to put my money where my mouth was. At the time, few blogs paid.

    So I started paying guest bloggers $50 a post (now $75). More importantly, I began advocating for websites to pay their contributors.

    My pay policy gets my blog mentions and links in many, many roundup posts about paying writing markets on popular blogs. Being a paying market continues to be a point of difference for me — and I consider the money I spend paying writers for guest posts my marketing budget. It’s money well spent.

    3. Provide high-value posts

    We all have days when we crank out a quick idea for our blog because we’re rushed or short of time.

    But if you want top bloggers to take note of you, it requires some serious thinking about your content. Analyze your most popular posts and the most popular posts of big blogs in your niche.

    What are the hot topics that get a spike of readers? That’s what you need to write about.

    I was pretty slow to figure this out. But if my blog is addressing the primal need of helping freelance writers earn more, it would help if I showed them exactly where they can get a better-paying gig! Duh.

    Once I figured it out, it wasn’t even hard to do. When I began paying for guest posts, I started hearing from other paying blogs. In short order, I had a short list.

    When I started publishing big roundup posts of paying markets, these were widely linked to by other blogs. I’ve made these market lists into a regular feature, because they continue to be big traffic drivers.

    Here you can see how my most recent, biggest-ever list post created a huge traffic spike that led to a new, higher baseline for post traffic:

    blogging

    This comprehensive list of paying markets created a major traffic surge.

    It’s the sort of event that’s a game-changer for the size of your blog audience.

    4. Be their case study

    Have you used a top blogger’s tip, and it helped you be healthier, wealthier, or happier? Let them know, and offer to serve as a case study.

    Give them a testimonial, do a Skype recording with them, come on their podcast — and they’ll pop you on their sales page and mention your blog for months or possibly years to come.

    I’m a case study inside of several different top bloggers’ courses or communities, and constantly hear from new readers who found me that way.

    Think creatively

    There are plenty of other ways to promote a blog: Press releases, in-person networking, and public speaking spring to mind. Some folks are techy enough to create an awesome tool to get them mentions.

    You know your market, your capabilities, and what the top bloggers in your industry might respond to.

    It’s worth the time to figure out how to stand out and get noticed.

    Of course, unless you’d like to spend hours and hours writing guest posts, when a quick mention from a top blogger can often get you even more visitors back to your blog.

    What strategies have you used to grow your blog’s audience?

  • How to Get People to Read Your Blog: 5 Savvy Strategies You Can Apply Today

    How to Get People to Read Your Blog: 5 Savvy Strategies You Can Apply Today

    So you’ve started a blog. Congratulations! You’ve joined roughly 74 million others, and that’s just counting those who use WordPress.

    (If you still haven’t started a blog, we highly recommend heading over to Bluehost to set one up right now!)

    Many people believe starting a blog is the most challenging part of the process.

    And believe me, I know starting a blog is nothing to sneeze at.  

    But when you start a blog, you feel excited and motivated. In your early days of blogging, the momentum of trying something new and different keeps you going.

    The most difficult part of blogging is what happens (or what doesn’t happen) next: Getting people to actually read your blog.

    “If you build it, they will come,” some say.

    …Not necessarily.

    In order to create a blog that will last for the long haul, build community, perhaps even make money and help you achieve your goals, this is where the hard work begins.

    You need to get people to actually read your blog. Here’s how to do it.

    1. Write amazing content

    First and foremost, your content needs to be amazing. There are way too many blogs out there with mediocre content. Yours needs to be better.

    There are several different ways to write blog content — and some may prove more effective than others. Consider these types of posts to provide value to your audience and keep them coming back for more.

    • Content roundups: A content roundup an authoritative post that lists the top 100 or another number of your choice whatevers (people, products, pieces of advice, podcasts, photos, websites, etc.) in your industry or niche — is an excellent tactic to send traffic your way, create authority and build lasting relationships.
    • Weekly or monthly features: Developing a regular feature, whether weekly or monthly, is a great way to let your audience know what consistency they can expect from you.

    For example, every Sunday I post a feature on my blog called “Start Your Week Right Sunday” where I highlight five to seven awesome links I found throughout the week and share my goals for the week ahead. It gives me the chance to highlight other awesome bloggers (like the content roundup idea above) and gives me at least one post idea per week to keep the content flowing.

    • Personal posts: When it comes to blogging, don’t be afraid to get personal. When you open up and allow yourself to be vulnerable, you show your audience you’re human. It will be easier to develop true relationships with your audience if you are willing to share it all: The good, the bad and everything in between. 
    • Massively useful guides or how-to posts: Creating a tell-all guide or an epic how-to post is a simple way to gain credibility and help your audience by giving them information they need to know at the same time. These types of posts tend to do well over time because they usually rank high in search.

    2. Spend just as much time marketing your content as you do writing it

    Once you publish a blog post, the work is far from over. The only way people are going to know you have new content is if you tell them!

    Time to put on your marketing hat.

    Follow the “rule of three”: When you create a piece of content, promote your new piece of content in at least three different places, at minimum, to make the writing worth your while and to ensure your content is actually being read.

    Here are some places you can share your content:

    • Facebook: Share your post on your personal page, on your brand page if you have one, and in relevant Facebook groups where sharing is allowed. 
    • Twitter: Draft several different versions of tweets to promote one post. Use tools like Hootsuite or Buffer to schedule tweets far into the future to ensure your post is being promoted over a longer period of time. 
    • Instagram: Post a relevant photo or blog graphic on Instagram and change the link in your Instagram profile to the link of the blog post you’re currently promoting. 
    • LinkedIn: Create a status update or consider republishing part of the post using LinkedIn’s powerful publishing platform. Include a link back to your site at the beginning and end of the post to let readers know where the content originally appeared. 
    • Pinterest. Include a photo or graphic with each post so that your content is Pinterest-friendly. Pin your posts to a specific blog board or other relevant board within your Pinterest account. 
    • Snapchat: If you’re active on Snapchat, take a photo of your blog post or create a short video talking about your latest post and encouraging viewers to check out your blog.

    3. Start building your email list, now

    The best thing a new blogger can do is start building your email list from the get-go. Even if you don’t plan to use it right away, starting to collect email addresses is crucial for building a community that trusts and allows you into their precious space: Their email inboxes.

    I recommended getting started  started with Mailchimp. It’s relatively user friendly and free for up to 2,000 subscribers.

    Begin collecting email address on your website by adding call-to-action boxes with HelloBar, an awesome lead generation tool that appears at the top of your website. Include an invitation to join your list at the end of each of your blog posts.

    Want to get even more people to join your list? Offer them a freebie, commonly known as an opt-in or lead magnet. Your lead magnet can be as simple as a one-page PDF checklist or as complex as an ebook, course or video series.

    Think about it this way: Your audience likely spends a lot of time in their inboxes already. When they share their email addresses with you, you increase the chances of them reading your content because you’re reaching them in their own personal space, rather than through a social media account or RSS feed.

    4. Figure out simple SEO

    I’m no SEO expert, but knowing basic principles can help you think differently when crafting blog post headlines and content to help your post rise in search rankings.

    There are easy things you can do to help your SEO, like choosing a keyword, crafting straightforward headlines, adding images to your post, and using numbers, subheads or bullets for easy reading.

    If you’re using WordPress, add a plugin like Yoast SEO to help your post perform better in Google’s eyes. Yoast allows you to preview what your post will look like on Google and allows you to select a keyword and change a post’s meta title and description to help boost your post on search.

    Yoast uses a handy traffic-light image (green=awesome, yellow=getting there, and red=room for improvement) to show how well your post is prepped in terms of SEO before you publish.

    5. Consider guest blogging on sites you admire

    Guest blogging is perhaps one of the top ways to get people to actually read your blog.

    When you write a guest post for another blog, you’re opening yourself up to a whole new audience of people who don’t yet know who you are, but will likely head over to check out your website if they like your guest content.

    Be smart about where you pitch a guest post. Naturally, you want the blog you’re pitching to have a larger and more established audience than your own. When your pitch is accepted, make sure you write an awesomely useful post and if allowed, link back to your website or relevant posts you’ve written.

    Once the post is published, be sure to share it as diligently as you’d share your own content and get to know that community by participating in the discussion in the comments section.

    Similar to guest posting, consider pitching your already-written blog posts to other blogs and websites that are open to republishing or syndicating content. If you write a post you’re proud of, seek another home for that post on a blog that may introduce your work to people who are good candidates for your own community.

    Have other ideas to get people to read your blog? Let’s hear them in the comments!

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