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Medium Is The Traffic Goldmine For Your Content Brand

January 11, 2018 by Marc Guberti 2 Comments

I'm happy to see you around. You may want to subscribe to my blog. Thanks for visiting!

Welcome back! I am so happy to see that you have come back for more.

medium traffic

Medium is an untapped traffic goldmine for your content brand. While some people simply copy and paste their blog posts into Medium, others have gone as far as shifting their entire blogs onto Medium.

I don’t recommend that kind of shift because your blog is your only true home on the web (after your article, Medium recommends other articles that keep people on their site, even if those articles aren’t yours), but when combined with your blog, you can see some really good results from Medium.

That’s why Gary Vaynerchuk frequently publishes content from his blog onto the Medium platform. It works. However, it’s not just for the big players like Gary.

One blogger went from 0 Medium visitors to over 30,000 monthly Medium visitors in just five months. And it’s amazing how simple the formula was:

Just publish 2-3 really good blog posts every week.

This blogger didn’t provide a detailed marketing strategy. Just publish epic content and Medium helps to spread the word.

Medium also has a cool rule that you can find all of your Twitter followers, Facebook friends, etc., and if they have a Medium account when you connect your social networks, they become your Medium followers. That’s why I gained 14,000 Medium followers on the day I created my account. That’s how many of my Twitter followers used Medium at the time, and that number only grows as more of my Twitter followers sign up for Medium.

 

Republishing Your Blog Posts On Medium

The most amazing thing about Medium is how easy it is for bloggers to publish content on Medium. No one’s asking you to perform a herculean task. You literally copy and paste your preexisting content into the Medium dashboard.

Then you watch the traffic roll in.

It helps if you promote your Medium articles on your social networks, but based on the case studies I’ve read, Medium does a great job at bringing the traffic to you as long as you consistently and frequently provide valuable content on the site.

If you have a WordPress blog and don’t like manually copying and pasting, this plugin puts your content on Medium for you.

However, I would go back and gradually put all of your past content on Medium. That post you wrote two years ago that is still valuable? Most people have probably forgotten about it or never seen it. Medium gives people a second chance at seeing that level of value.

 

Building your list with Medium

The one thing that keeps people away from putting all of their content on a place like Medium is that Medium can change their rules at any time.

Brands saw the full power of rule changes when Facebook made it increasingly hard to play an organic growth game without putting a penny down. Now Facebook wants a lot more than your penny, but only if you want to grow your audience.

Medium isn’t like that right now, and I don’t see Medium taking that path for a long time. In fact, they’re against advertisements which is good for all of us. At this point, two thoughts are in my head:

  • Just in case…
  • I don’t own the traffic

Without a strategy in place to grow your email list, you’re like me when I started to see massive traffic coming to this blog. Out of my first 150,000 visitors, only 300 of them subscribed. No need to take out the calculator. Just know that it’s a very horrible rate because I literally had nothing set up (welcome mat, pop-up, landing page, etc.) except for that sidebar opt-in that WordPress provides you.

So I had a very basic (pretty much nonexistent) strategy for growing my email list. And I left a lot of money on the table.

Don’t do the same thing with Medium. Even if your Medium articles get hot, it won’t matter if you’re not growing your email list.

At the end of your Medium article, include a call-to-action where you ask people to subscribe to your email list in exchange for a free offer. It can be an eBook, a webinar, or anything you’d like. Just make sure you offer something that leads people back to a landing page.

 

Why You Still Need A Blog Outside Of Medium

blogging

Some Medium lovers have decided to use Medium as their main blog instead of using something like WordPress to create the blog. I definitely see the advantage of Medium. It’s 100% free, and you don’t pay for hosting or other expenses associated with a blog like this one.

However, this blog is much more optimized at helping my content brand grow than my Medium blog. On this blog, I have a welcome mat, several landing pages, a sidebar opt-in, and much more. There are plenty of contact points where I ask people in my audience if they want to join my email list.

On Medium, I only get to use that CTA at the end of the post. While my Medium followers may still view my content, it’s more difficult to grow your email list with Medium than a traditional blog. Granted, it seems easier to get traffic with Medium, but if you can’t convert that traffic, than it doesn’t matter.

Medium shouldn’t act as a substitute to having your own blog, but rather, Medium should complement what you already have.

 

In Conclusion

In a world dominated by how-to articles for Facebook and Twitter, some social networks like Medium fall completely under the radar. These are the gold mines for blog traffic that can have a significant impact on your brand.

And out of all of the social networks, Medium involves the least amount of work. You are literally copying and pasting your existing blog posts. Even if that’s too much work for you, there’s a WordPress plugin that does it for you.

Medium presents the easiest, time efficient approach to spreading your message and content to an entirely new audience.

Do you republish your blog posts on Medium? Do you have any tips on growing your Medium presence and your email list in the process? Do you have a question for me? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: medium

E69: Building The Rich & Relaxed Business Of Our Dreams With Penny Elliott

January 10, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Penny Elliott runs a 6-figure business and has been published in over 25 magazines and media outlets. After making over $15 million in sales over 16 years, she discovered how to easily make sales, and she teaches others how to do the same. She works with motivated female entrepreneurs to give them the confidence to live a life they love through enhanced sales in their businesses.

 

Quotes To Remember:

“If you don’t have sales in your business, then you don’t have a business, you just have a pretty website.”

“Outsource as much as you possibly can.”

“If you’re doing anything more than once, automate it.”

“When you’ve got a peak in sales, look back to see what it is that you did to cause this to happen.”

“As soon as you drop off the gas, you’ll slow down.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • Learn to be able to have BOTH a rich and relaxing lifestyle.
  • Learn to prioritise and focus on the “money making aspects” of your business
  • How to create ONE useful way to help focus on areas of your business.
  • Learn to analyse previous performance to see how it affects your current income.
  • How and why to find a coach to boost your performance.

 

Key Links From The Show:

Penny’s Site

 

Recommended Books:

The Confidence Code by Katty Kay and Claire Shipman

The Prosperous Coach by Steve chandler and Rich Litvin

The Big Leap by Gay Hendricks

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

The Chatterbox Revolution: The Next Content Marketing Trend Is All About Relationships

January 10, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

chatterbox revolution

When Mark Schaefer wrote about content shock back in 2014, we saw a new trend. As more content populated the web and our 24 hour days never grew in proportion to this level of content creation, we found ourselves overwhelmed by content.

Content shock was and still is the reason why it’s harder for today’s newbie to grow a digital empire than it was for newbies from 10 years ago to do the same. Back then, there was much less content and fewer big players. Now the web is filled to the brim with content.

Content shock is only growing, and even our most loyal fans juggle our blogs with other people’s blogs. Marketing has always been a battle of attention, but the future winners of content marketing will go beyond the level of expectation to attract that attention.

 

The Chatterbox Revolution Is The Key To Expansion

When you post new content, you might attract people to it. They’ll read it for a little bit and then go somewhere else. If your’e lucky, these people will follow you on social networks and subscribe to your email list.

At this stage, your reader will receive your content in a variety of forms. This may sound great since you get them on multiple platforms, especially the email list.

While this will definitely get you returning visitors, realize that growing your social media audience and getting them on your email list is no big secret. EVERYONE is trying to achieve those objectives because they’re easy and effective.

Just get people to follow you on social media and send them to your email list. If you have 1,000 people on your email list, send one email and 1,000 people get it.

The winners of the future are the people who interact on a 1-to-1 level with as many of those 1,000 people as possible. They’re interacting with as many of their Twitter followers as possible and outreaching as often as possible.

Sending 100 emails in one day to people in your audience and another 100 for outreach will be considered productive instead of time sucking. Even if you delegate both of these tasks to save time, you’ll still need to do some of the responding and outreaching.

This is what I like to call the Chatterbox Revolution. In the past, brushing interaction to the side in favor of producing more content or doing almost anything was the norm. Interaction happened, but it wasn’t the priority. Whether it was content creation, product creation, or marketing, something else always seemed to be more important.

Now interacting with your audience and building new relationships on a 1-to-1 level are the two top priorities of your business.

Yes, growing a social media audience and an engaged email list are still important. However, you’re not doing anything special by building up those audiences. Special happens when you interact with individual people beyond any of your automation strategies currently in place.

It’s taking the time to reply to hundreds of comments each day. It’s commenting on other people’s blogs more often and getting into other conversations. It’s having longer conversations with your audience.

Your audience will increasingly love you for the attention you give them, and in return for your attention, they will give you their attention. The Chatterbox Revolution views attention as a two-way street where you must pay attention to your audience so they pay attention to you.

 

What Happens To Content Creation?

Each time you create a new piece of content, you give your audience another reason to give you their attention. If you don’t publish a blog post in a month, your audience doesn’t have to check back in for a month. Give them that long to check in, and they won’t remember who you are.

It’s important for us to be frequent and consistent with content creation. I’m publishing a new blog post and a new podcast episode every day because that gives my audience plenty of reasons to pay attention to what I’m doing. If anyone in my audience thinks of me upon waking up, they know I either published something new or am about to.

With that said, I don’t see people spending as much time writing content. I only write one blog post per day. In the past, I wrote three blog posts on 1-2 day and held off for the rest of the week. That resulted in my inconsistency, and since I wrote 2,000+ word blog posts, it took a long time for me to go from idea to finished content.

Some content creators will increasingly update their old material and publish it as new material. This is a time-effective strategy that will provide their audience with new content and give these content creators more time to embrace the Chatterbox Revolution.

For some, it will be more about playing with what they already have than creating new stuff.

Some content creators will embrace daily blog posts, but they won’t be as long as usual. I almost never aim for 2,000+ word blog posts anymore because each minute I spend writing a blog post is another minute that I can’t interact with someone in my audience.

At the same time, people pay attention because of the content I provide, so I handle my content creation with care. For me, this is a more concise blog post than what I’ve written in the past. I almost never spend more than 30 minutes on a blog post anymore.

I want to get the message down without too much scrolling. That way, you’ll have more bandwidth to stick around and read a few more blog posts. Now all I have to do on capitalize on this extra attention is to interact with you on a 1-to-1 level.

 

In Conclusion

The Chatterbox Revolution is now in full swing, but there were content creators ahead of their time. Two that quickly come to mind are Neil Patel and Gary Vaynerchuk. Neil responds to every comment on his blog, and while others may do the same, Neil can get hundreds of comments for a given blog post. Gary Vee interacts with his audience by taking their questions and communicating with social media and email.

One thing you’ll also notice is that these content creators produce a lot of content (at least one new piece of content every day). Some of it can be recycled, but they’re providing their audience with a new piece of content every day.

What are your thoughts on the Chatterbox Revolution? Are you ready to embrace it, or not yet? Do you have a question for me? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Blogging, Connections Tagged With: relationships

E68: Finding Inspiration To Power Through Life’s Challenges With Christine McAlister

January 9, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Christine McAlister is business and success coach and expert on turning tragedy into triumph. Her company, Life With Passion, helps high-achieving, motivated women to create successful freedom-based businesses they love.

Quotes To Remember:

“If I could survive this thing, I could do or survive anything else.”

“Our lives are full of highs and lows?.the more embracing we are of both…that allows us to sustain the highs for longer.”

“A lot of times, it’s like we are inside a jar, and we can’t see our own label.”

“You already have something that you are an expert in, whether or not you know it, or believe it.”

What You’ll Learn:

  • How to keep up moral levels and look after ourselves during challenge & tragedy.
  • Learn to stay in the “triumph” phase of your life, rather than getting stuck in the “tragic” phase.
  • Learn why it’s important to have a mentor/coach to help you be your best self
  • How to make time for multiple aspects of life, including personal life, business growth.
  • Learn it is ok to give yourself time off to make sure you can be as productive as possible.

 

Key Links From The Show:

Christine’s Free Gift for Listeners

 

Recommended Books:

The Big Leap by Gay Hendricks

You’re a Bada** at Making Money by Jen Sincero

How Rich People Think by Steve Siebold

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

How To Optimize Your Best Blog Posts For More Traffic

January 9, 2018 by Marc Guberti 2 Comments

blog post optimization

Ever look back at your old content? You should, and not just for the memories. It turns out your past content is often your most successful content. Updating these blog posts will give them more SEO juice, and promoting them on social media will get the ball rolling even more.

The question remains. How do we update these older blog posts so they attract more visitors? That’s what we will explore right now.

 

Do More Research

In the beginning of blogging, valuable content separated you from the rest of the crowd. Now valuable content has become a normal place. You can find many people offering similar advice to the advice that I offer.

There are two reasons you’ll stick with one blogger over the other even if they teach the same lessons. The first reason is research. Bloggers who back up their blogs with stats and links to other sites attract more traffic. That’s what doing research means in the blogging sense. Present your findings to your audience.

In addition to boosting your blog’s value, this type of research helps your SEO. It’s proven that linking to outside sources will have a positive effect on your SEO.

We are barely into this blog post, and I have already provided two links you can click on for additional information. In 2017, I thought about doing this but almost never did it. This year, I’m adding multiple links to all of my blog posts and going back to make changes in my older blog posts that are still raking in traffic.

 

Make Your Story More Public

At this time in history, most of my current visitors remember me as a teen entrepreneur. I’m 20 now, but I made my story of being a teen blogger well-known. Your About Me Page will be the most visited page on your blog. Give an epic story about yourself.

We all love stories, and framing your story the right way will help you attract an audience of loyal visitors who frequently engage with your content. However, in this state of info overwhelm, our stories need to extend beyond the About Me page.

We all need to start including more personal anecdotes within our content that covers a different stage. In one story, I may talk about how I struggled to achieve an objective. I occasionally mention how it took me three attempts spread across a few years (I almost wrote many years, but we know that’s not true in comparison to how long other people have lived. It does feel like many years for me).

In a goal setting blog post, I can discuss how I surpassed 100,000 Twitter followers much faster than I anticipated. While this may sound like a great thing to do for your new content, you can inject these stories into your older content to give them a more personal touch.

You can also turn the entire blog post into a story with insights as Chris Von Wilpert did over at Sumo. In his blog post, he discussed lessons learned from growing Sumo Blog from 100K monthly visitors to 200K monthly visitors.

We are in the era of personal touch and excessive research. We are beyond valuable content because it’s no longer a premium but rather an expectation. You don’t stand out by fulfilling expectations. You only stand out by exceeding them and going the extra miles.

 

“What Did I Miss?”

missing puzzle piece

This is the question I always ask myself when I look back at an old blog post. Since I wrote weekly blog posts during that time (and now daily blog posts), it’s easy to focus on cranking out the content and not spend as much time polishing it.

While there are ways to make content creation less stressful, we’ve all been there when we have to write or schedule tomorrow’s blog post the night before. Some of us have not been there for a while, but others constantly relive that stress for all of their content.

Even in this sped up state, I don’t miss out on value. All of the blog posts are valuable, but sometimes I missed out on going that extra mile. I didn’t do additional research to provide my audience with more options. I didn’t always inject personal stories into my content. Sometimes I even missed out on adding an extra tip or two that could have enhanced the blog post.

But instead of doing nothing about it, I update the old content. After the update, my content is more valuable and has the fresh factor that Google loves.

I enjoy asking myself this question because it opens the doors to so many possibilities. You can turn a 500 word blog post into a 2,000 word blog post just by repeatedly asking yourself this question and thinking about what the answers can be.

 

Are They Optimized At All?

I didn’t always use the SEO Yoast Plugin for my blog. That means not all of my blog posts are optimized as well as they can be.

Just because your new blog posts are optimized doesn’t mean your old blog posts received the same care, and those are the blog posts that should be generating the most traffic.

When you find yourself implementing new tactics like adding share buttons throughout your content or using the SEO Yoast Plugin, you need to do those things for your top content.

There are plenty of ways to optimize your blog for search engines beyond the SEO Yoast plugin. As you integrate more tactics to your optimization strategy, go back to your older blog posts to make sure they are optimized.

 

In Conclusion

Not all of your old blog posts are created equal. There are some blog posts that I have updated multiple times. There are other blog posts on this blog that I wouldn’t even touch (most of the blog posts I wrote when I just began. I keep them up to show people the transformation).

When you optimize your older blog posts, don’t put yourself on a mission to optimize all of them (unless you don’t have many blog posts). As of writing, I have published over 1,500 blog posts on this blog. That number will only grow.

I don’t update 1,500 blog posts every year. I only update a few dozen based on which ones are the top performers. Those blog posts get the updates for SEO and list growth purposes.

What are your thoughts on updating older blog posts? Have you updated a blog post recently? Do you have a question for me? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: seo

E67: Outperforming The Real Estate Marketing On The Way To 7-Figures With Aaron Hendon

January 8, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Aaron Hendon is a Seattle Realtor, real estate investor, author, educator, and speaker. He is a managing partner of Christine & Company, a Seattle Magazine awarded, 5-Star Real Estate Agent, and an individual Rising Star in Seattle Real Estate winner. Aaron brings together a diverse background and history including transformational leadership, entrepreneurial start-ups, and traditional cold calling sales.

 

Quotes To Remember:

“I was smiling and dialing.”

“You don’t have to convince people to buy a house, they already want to buy a house.”

“A black swan lurks behind every corner.”

“You get what you measure.”

“If you don’t work you don’t eat.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • How to get started in real estate, without taking a risky hit
  • Learn what criteria to consider and look for when investing
  • Learn why cold calling/making phone calls is imperative to selling real estate
  • How and where to find the right clients without paying
  • When to take the plunge into commission only salary.

 

Key Links From The Show:

Aaron’s Site

 

Recommended Books:

Pre-suasion by Robert Cialdini

To Sell Is Human by Daniel Pink

The Undoing Project by Michael Lewis
Shortchanged by Shortcuts by Aaron Hendon

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

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Primary Sidebar

I am a business freelance writer who writes for individuals, small businesses, and corporations. My content will help drive engagement and sales to your business. I have produced content for several companies, including…

  • Upwork
  • MoneyLion
  • Freight Waves
  • Westchester Business Journal
  • Property Onion

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