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 Better Design: Cleaning Up The House

Submitted by Markus Merz on December 8, 2007 - 2:41pm in

Can you please step back and look at your blog like a 1st time visitor?
Does the single article view answer the readers question immediately?

Is your homepage a 5* hotel lobby or a cluttered discount shop?

"I have no idea how to find something on your page." Could this be the #1 answer of a 1st time visitor when arriving at your blog?

Believe it or not but this is the main difference between people used to read blogs and standard Susan Surfer. Standard websurfers have no idea how a blog works. They want to SUCK information. FAST!

From: Attracting Joe Surfer to stay: It's the navigation stupid

How many 1st time visitors do you have? I assume that a standard medium traffic blog has between 60% and 90% 1st time visitors. Please don't expect blogging knowledge from your 1st time visitors!

Some basics, a provocation and five 'go read' link tips...

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 Should Your Blog Have A Static Home Page?

Submitted by pholpher on December 3, 2007 - 7:58pm in

I'm planning on starting a blog soon. I'm stuck with whether to have a static home page or have the blog as my home page.

Two of my favorite blogs, SEO Book and Search Engine Land (both are popular blogs), use different formats. This year SEO Book changed to a static home page. Search Engine Land has kept the blog home page.

Which is the better home page? Well, after some thought, I've come to these conclusions.

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 What Makes You Want To Subscribe

Submitted by nathanrice on July 2, 2007 - 3:25pm in

I generally subscribe to 3-5 new blogs per month. Maybe they're not new, but they're new to me, because I've never heard of them or read them before. But trying to quantify the features of the blogs I subscribe to is hard to do. Why do I subscribe? Is it the content? The design?

Because I'm a curious guy, I decided to take some inventory of the blogs in my reader. It was actually a pretty fun experiment. I was surprised to actually see the design of some of the blogs. Since I read exclusively from my reader, I didn't even remember what the design looked like :-)

Here are 5 features I've found to be effective to convincing me to subscribe.

1. Would it be cliche to say that content matters?

I don't really care if it's cliche or not, content matters! If you don't have regular decent articles, or at the very least articles that encourage lively discussion, then don't even bother starting a blog. I'm dead serious. Blog content, to a person who reads 80+ feeds, is of paramount importance. Don't even think about softball articles.

2. A clean, simple, aesthetically pleasing design

If you can't design a site for your blog software, pay someone to do it. We are professionals. This is what we do. You can't ignore the fact that if your design sucks, you won't get as many readers. I'm partial to sites with the content on the left and two well used right hand sidebars, but that's just me.

3. Readable Text

If your readers are like me, then they will bookmark your site before subscribing to it. Normally, I will bookmark the blog in del.icio.us and come back once or twice a week and check the content. I use this time to see if the site is worth a spot in my reader. So.... that means for at least a week, I will be reading your content directly on your site ... which means you need readable text. For me, that means either Arial or Trebuchet MS fonts. If you use Lucida Grande, I'm gonna be pissed. I just thing that font is unreadable. If you use a Georgia or Times New Roman font, you might be pushing the line. It better be a big font with lots of space. Serif fonts, without good spacing, can be unreadable as well.

4. Prominent Link to Your RSS Feed

I like to reward good bloggers by subscribing directly to their feedburner feed ... if they have one. The joy of seeing new readers in your stats is a good encouragement ... something you don't get if I subscribe to your blog's feed address. So, don't make me hunt for your link. If it takes me too long to find the link, I'll just click the RSS button in the address bar of FireFox. Normally, that will give me your blog's feed, not your feedburner feed. Worse still, if I'm in a bad mood and I can't find your link, I might not even subscribe at all, out of spite for the time you made me waste. Think about it.

5. Comment on My Blog

OK, OK, this has nothing to do with your design, but it will get me to read your blog. My personal blog is religious in nature. I like to find good bloggers in my niche. The way I do that is by checking who my favorite bloggers link to, and by checking the sites of the people who comment on my blog (also, linking to me gets you lots of love). If you can contribute to the conversation in my comments, I will probably assume that you can contribute to the conversation on your own blog. Nearly every single one of my regular commenters holds a place in my feed reader. That's not a coincidence.

What about you? What makes you subscribe to a blog's feed? Be honest and asses the blogs that hold a place in your reader and ask yourself why you subscribed. Was it the cool design? The great content? The ease of process? Did they comment on your blog? What was it? Let everyone know in the comments!