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10 Articles All Bloggers Should Read (at least once)
I have about twenty bloggers working for me at any given time. Many new bloggers are often not familiar with the details of blogging software (e.g. the screwy video embed issue with WP) or they don’t know much about the art of blogging (other than writing about the blog’s topic).
Over time I’ve developed a list of ten articles that I send to all my new bloggers as part of their initiation. Today I’ve decided to make one version of that list public in the hopes that new bloggers everywhere can benefit, and maybe we can turn the comment section into a “you forgot this one” list.
Many of these posts overlap in theme, and some even cover the same topic. But reinforcement never hurt anyone.
(these are listed in order of priority)
1. How to Write Magnetic Headlines
In my view, headlines are the most important aspect of blogging both from a reader standpoint and an SEO standpoint. Brian Clark has written the authoritative guide to Headline writing, and if you haven’t read it yet, let me just suggest that you should easily be able to double your readership and search traffic just by following his suggestions.
2. How Can 10 Simple Articles Change Your Life?
This article is all about creating a long-term vision for becoming an expert blogger. Chris Pearson introduced me to the idea of how a blogger can establish authority with 10 killer posts. In fact, Chris had probably established his authority before he got to 10 (somewhat due to his design skills, I’ll admit). Nonetheless, it’s 100% true that you can enter from under the radar and dominate a niche just by writing long (seriously long), well organized, authoritative articles on your topic. Of course, they need to be good articles. And they need to provide unique analysis and information. And you probably do need to be an expert. But you’d be surprised by how many experts are out there trying to rise above the crowd with short little 300 word newsy posts. Not going to do it.
This is perhaps the one article that will make the biggest immediate difference. Visual display is to blogging like curb-appeal is to real estate. Bloggers should be constantly thinking about the curb-appeal of each article. It really makes a difference.
Here’s an experiment I’ve run several times. Setup a blog. Tell the blogger how to use WordPress. Don’t give any article hints. See what comes out the other end. If your experience is like mine, then you know that most of the time you’ll see two very bad habits form. One, the article titles will not be specific enough (and they’ll be dull). Two, the blogger will develop a one-dimensional article style. To avoid this situation, make sure you read Chris Garrett’s suggestions for 10 Killer Post Ideas.
5. 7 Steps to Being Recognized as an Expert
Liz gives you seven effective ways to build an expert reputation. As a blogger, building a reputation in a specialized niche should always be your goal. Start by following Liz’s methods and you’ll be on the right track.
6. Converting One off Visitors to your Blog into Regular Readers
Getting visitors is not enough. You want your visitors to stick. I don’t know how many times I’ve found one of my blogs the beneficiary of a massive traffic surge, only to find three days later that the surge hadn’t been sticky. A blogger constantly looking to convert visitors into regular readers. Darren Rowse’s classic post gives you the essentials for building a long-term relationship with your new visitors.
7. 5 Simple Ways to Open Your Blog Post With a Bang
Catching and keeping your reader’s attention is critical, especially for realing in new readers. Brian Clark gives us five of the best ways to get your readers to bite from the very beginning.
Nick Wilson’s article rocked my world when I first read it. Just as in the academic discipline of Logic there are “forms of argument” The Art of Linkbaiting helped to define “forms of blogging.” What’s most impressive is that it gives the blogger a way to be very intentional about her content. “What purpose does this post serve in the overall scheme of my blog? Will it help attract a sticky readership?” While not all blog posts need to be linkbait, blogging should be about giving the reader what the reader wants. And in the end that’s all that linkbait is about. Be the first or the best at giving the reader what she wants, and you’re golden.
9. Before You Begin Blogging: A few things you should know
The worst thing you can do is give a new blogger false hopes. DebNg provides a completely accurate and sobering look at the reality of problogging. This is the first article that I show to all of my potential bloggers before they even get started. False hope is the number one killer of new bloggers aged 15 to 85.
10. 5 Surefire Steps To Increase Readership 300% (or more)
Ok. Here’s my little contribution to the list. Once a blogger has gotten the hang of writing quality, linkable content, it’s time to add those little things that can take a blog to the next level.
Bonus: Why Live Blog Stats Matter
A Simple Question For the WordPress Community
Matt Mullenweg likes playing the victim. But in reality, he’s using his perceived victimhood to evade the key question over sponsored themes:
Wouldn’t it be better to establish a *quality* criterion as opposed to a *sponsorship* criterion?
Another way of putting it is this:
Aren’t PressRow and Cutline damned good WordPress themes that have benefited the WordPress community?
Instead of answering these questions straight-up, I expect that Matt (and his WP fanboys) will continue to take the following copouts:
1. Cry victim and ignore this legitimate criticism
2. Claim “significant financial interests in seeing sponsored themes continue”
The fact is that both of these responses are irrational. Arguments can be sound regardless of who makes them. I’ve made an argument that you might refer to as reductio ad absurdem: the new policy has the brittle effect of wiping out great themes like Cutline and PressRow. That’s an undesirable effect. There must be some middle ground.
But no. We’ll throw the baby out with the bath water. And we’ll cry victim while we’re at it (and delete reasonable comments that make us look bad;-)
The AdSense Placement Thread
Update: This thread is now closed. Thank you for your submissions.
Alrighty. The title pretty much says it all. For a limited time only 😉 you can drop a link to your blog in this thread and the Performancing community will try its best to give you advice on: 1. Location of your adsense ads, 2. Color and style of your adsense ads.
Performance in action.
When the Powerful Pontificate, I Puke
Why the slippery slope argument doesn’t work for theme sponsorships, and why people in power make bad decisions look good
I’m going to keep this short and sweet. When successful and powerful people pontificate about taking the “the high ground” and establish policies based on the good of the community your first instinct should be skepticism, not acceptance. They could be right, but let the rightness of their positions emerge after a skeptical look, not before.
Matt Cutts and Matt Mullenweg are sitting at the top. They’re successful people. Very successful people. They are both worth millions of dollars. Both of them really don’t have a damned thing to worry about for the rest of their lives. They could both buy an island, build a solar powered mansion, and retire. If the United States gets attacked, they both have the resources to quickly relocate to some other country for safety.
Matt Cutts and Matt Mullenweg are not like the rest of us. But they are telling the rest of us what to do and what not to do. A lot like Al Gore (I agree with Al on global warming, but the hypocrisy and standards of living are just puke-wrenching).
Here’s my argument:
Premise 1: There are some very good themes that have been designed under a sponsored-theme model
Premise 2: Some of the best themes on the net have been designed for link building purposes
Premise 3: Some of the greatest works of art and architecture in the history of mankind have been created under a commissioning model
Premise 4: A distinction can be made between legitimate sponsorships and spammy sponsorships.
Premise 5: It is the responsibility of big companies like Google and Automattic to not be lazy (Google should add that to their, don’t be evil motto) if it hurts the little guy.
Premise 6: Failure to meet this responsibility by big companies like Google and Automattic is tantamount to pissing on the little guy (or stomping, if that seems more appropriate)
Premise 7: Pissing on the little guy (and on creative motivation) makes me puke
Here’s the reasoning: If some of the best themes on the net have been created either under a sponsorship or link building model, then the community of bloggers have benefited from the sponsorship model (e.g. sponsorship was productive and a non-zero sum game for bloggers). If a distinction can be made between legitimate sponsorships and spammy sponsorships, then a policy can be implemented to weed out the spammy sponsorships, but keep the legitimate sponsorships. If a distinction can be made between legit sponsorships and spammy sponsorships, while preserving the inherit good of a “commissioning” model to produce quality themes, then it is the responsibility of big companies like Google and Automattic to make these sorts of distinctions. Because Google and Automattic are failing to make these sorts of distinctions, they are effectively pissing on the little guy (and creative motivation). Therefore, Matt Cutts and Matt Mullenweg make me puke.
Well, there are plenty of mistakes here (like equivocating between Matt Cutts and Google, or Matt Mullenweg and Automattic), but the point and the spirit of the logic are there.
I’m now ready to hear your responses.
Performancing Experiment Rocks The SERPS – Can you say “front page”?
Many of you have written to me privately indicating that the first monthly Performancing Experiment has been a huge gold-mine of information – advice in action, as one of you put it.
That’s exactly why I decided to start these experiments. I find that unless I see advice in action, I normally don’t act on the advice.
While the experiment is not yet over, and will continue through the end of 2007, I did want to provide an update and offer some reflections:
- As of July 11th, I’m seeing front page Google results on a search for “harry potter and the deathly hallows” (this could change of course, as Google might flip some switch)
- I’m currently conducting an interview with the Global Literacy Project, the charity to which all proceeds from the project are going
- The comments on the Harry Potter blog are starting to go through the roof
- The viral email that I sent out seems to have failed.
- The Harry Potter for charity program is underperforming.
In my estimation, while the blog is still only about 3-4 weeks old, it has established itself as an authority on book 7 in the Harry Potter series.
So what I’ve discovered so far is that it’s much easier to establish oneself as an authority in the SERPS than it is to create a “phenomenon” – the One Million Harry Potter Books for Charity was an attempt to create a phenomenon (1 million books is a lot). So far, we’ve only gotten about 20 books ordered through the site.
The good news is that we still have the entire year of 2007 to generate funds for the charity. Then, we can probably sell the blog and donate all proceeds to charity as well. And I’m also going to be volunteering my services to help the Global Literacy Project setup a blog and promote their website. Even when you don’t “hit it big” there’s still much to gain.
Overall, I’d call this experiment a success. We didn’t create a “phenomenon” but we did learn some valuable lessons and have created an authority website.
Be an expert, write for Performancing!
I have a deal for you. As you may have noticed, Performancing is rebooting. And part of the reboot involves you.
Ok. So what’s the deal? Right?
Well, we want you to be an expert, and we’re offering free front page links if you’re willing to give it a shot;-)
Performancing is looking for members with expertise to step up to the plate and write articles in the following areas:
- Blogging
- Monetization
- Promotion
- Management (hosting, legal issues)
- Design (including WP themes and plugins)
- Blog NetWorks
- Blogging Jobs (and hiring)
- Blog Buying & Selling (including blog valuations)
Do you have what it takes? I think you do.
Start by submitting posts to your Performancing blog and establish yourself as a Performancing expert. Not only will Performancing position you as a knowledgeable expert in front of a hugely influential audience, but you’ll also get a free backlink from each front page article. That’s a great deal.
To get started, go ahead and commit to writing just one expert article. See how it goes.
Not only will you be helping the Performancing community, but you just might be opening up doors that you didn’t know existed.
Legal Issues for Bloggers: A New Performancing Resource
Performancing is happy to announce a forum dedicated to legal issues that bloggers face. In addition to stock DMCA notices and cease and desist letters, Jonathan Bailey from Plagiarism Today will be offering advice and conducting research into specific issues.
The forum will focus primarily on content theft, but also other issues that a blogger may face including, defamation, trademark, free speech issues, privacy and more. If Jonathan does not know the answer he will research it for you and provide an opinion.
We hope that this resource proves to be helpful to the blogging community, especially as many of us are “on our own” so to speak without the standard legal resources that an incorporated business might have.
Jonathan has written an introductory post to get things started and we hope that you’ll all welcome him to the Performancing community.