• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Marc's Blog

Content Writing and Marketing Services

  • Home
  • About
  • Advertising Services
  • Podcast
  • What I’m Doing Now
  • Writing Portfolio

4 Keys to a Successful Blog

November 18, 2016 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

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.

create a successful blog

There are many factors driving a successful blog: high-quality content, engagement, social media traffic, search engine traffic, domain authority and more. I focused on all of those and attracted hundreds of visitors to blog, but did that make my blog a success? Nope. Here’s what made my blog successful:

 

Serve Your Audience

Focusing too much on SEO and metrics can lead to overlooking the most important part of your blog: your audience. Serve your audience and you’ll build a loyal following. I’ve heard this advice a hundred times over.

While it’s valuable advice, it has become a bit overrated. Don’t get me wrong. Serving my audience has helped a lot, but it’s only piece of the puzzle. Serving your audience means being attuned to their needs and interests, and creating valuable content accordingly.

But in a world filled with good content, writing more of it just isn’t enough. To truly serve your audience, you’ve got to do more. Think of content as an appetizer in a three course meal.

 

A Recipe for Success

Some bloggers mistakenly think success is a numbers game. But traffic and visitors alone won’t propel you to the top. Some blogs thrive because they enjoy hundreds of thousands of visitors while others struggle with that kind of traffic, or any kind of traffic for that matter.

But the real winners are the bloggers who truly LOVE their readers. I’m talking about the bloggers who, in addition to offering valuable content consistently, nurture their communities. They make themselves available by regularly answering readers’ questions, responding to their comments and engaging with their content.

If you view everyone in your audience as little more than a potential customer, your blogging journey will hit a lot of bumps. View each member of your audience as a human being with something to offer besides a pocket full of money.

 

Go Above And Beyond

You should already be going above and beyond with your content. But you should also strive to go the extra mile with your audience by acknowledging and showing appreciation for their support, and offering your own.

Writing alone doesn’t do that.  Acknowledge your audience by engaging with their social media posts, responding to their emails and thanking them for sharing your content. Always try to be available.

Neil Patel writes some of the longest SEO related blog posts known to mankind. I’m sure he’s written at least a few posts that exceed 10,000 words. He also spends a lot of time marketing himself.

One would think a busy man like Neil would have little time to dedicate to his audience. But that’s actually where he dedicates most of his time. According to an infographic on his blog, Neil receives around 207 emails every day. He responds to 91 of them!

contact neil patel infographic

Neil spends four hours a day going through his inbox and responding to anything from business questions to interview requests. He also makes the time to respond to readers’ comments on his blog posts, which easily attract 100’s of comments! His older posts consistently receive engagement as well.

 

Make Your Audience Part Of The Action

For a long time, I saw guest blogging as a personal opportunity but hesitated to accept guest posts for my own blog. Yet the benefits of opening your blog to guest contributors are many. It saves you time, keeps your content fresh and varied, helps increase your traffic and adds value.

Not only that, guest contributors become part of your story.

I have written many guest posts. Two that stand out were for Jeff Bullas’ Blog and ProBlogger. When I first started out, these blogs were the holy grail of blogging and social media, so I read them every day to learn more about my niche. Once I gained experience and expertise, it was an honor to be given the opportunity to contribute to these blogs.

Contributors inevitably have different motivations for writing guest posts. Some enjoy seeing their name on a credible blog (and potentially building their own brand), others enjoy giving back to the blogs they’ve learned from in the past. But every contributor becomes a small part of the blog’s story, of your story.

As an added bonus, you get a backlink. You can also do something similar on YouTube by recording collaborative videos with audience members.

 

Don’t Oversell

Overselling to your readers is a surefire way to make the relationship sour. You may be overselling if you are:

  • Creating products in bulk.
  • Involved in affiliate marketing.

Of course, some people who create products into bulk and/or engage in affiliate marketing don’t fall into this trap. The danger arises when you’re too heavily promoting a product (yours or an affiliate’s) every month. I made this mistake.

I first got involved with promoting other people’s courses in 2015. The first time I promoted someone else’s course to my email list I got a bunch of sales. The next month, I promoted a different course and got a bunch of sales. The following month, I did the same.

I spend five straight months promoting other people’s products and very little time delivering value. The result? Increased unsubscribes, fewer email opens, and fewer clicks. It was an email marketing nightmare. My email list is still somewhat scarred by the aftermath but my open and clickthrough rates are gradually increasing.

The point is I enjoyed increased revenues initially, but eventually my sales and email subscribes took a hit. Why? Because I was too focused on pushing products and not providing anything of free value. Worst of all, I saw my email list as just that: a list. Nameless, faceless people with wallets.

It’s was a big mistake, and hard to admit, but if I can help you avoid making the same error I’ll be happy.  In fact, I can thank one of my subscribers for helping me see the light. His email said, “You’re better than this.” And his sentiments were likely shared by the others on my list, the silent majority.

 

In Conclusion

While I still occasionally promote other people’s training courses, I am more focused than ever on my audience’s needs and interests, and giving them something of value that they can use.

Any successful blogger is successful because of his/her audience. Tenacity and grit factor in, but a blog is useless without a loyal following. If you love your readers, they will love you back (and will also be more open to trying your products and services in the future).

What are your thoughts on audience engagement? Do you believe there is a more important determinant of a blog’s success? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: affiliate marketing, audience, blogging, blogging tips and tricks, blogs, email marketing, readership

10 Dos and Don’ts For Writing Smooth Content

November 14, 2016 by Marc Guberti 2 Comments

writing valuable content

This is a guest contribution from Kate Simpson

As a writer, you are indirectly employed by your target audience. It is not your job to appeal to every viewer/reader you receive, in fact, writers that try to “Please everybody” are typically easier to ignore.

Your job is to give your target audience something they like, something new, and something that challenges them. Here are a few rules that professional content writers live by in order to do just that.

 

#1: DO Overwrite And Then Cut It Down Later

Write way too much, then go back and cut out the fluff, then make it more concise. This technique is fairly new since computing technology allows people to write far more in a far shorter time. Companies like AssignmentMasters have been doing it for years, where the content is overwritten and then trimmed down so that only the best content is left behind.

 

#2: DON’T Forget That Habits Are A Friend And Enemy

Form positive habits and you will become a more productive writer. Fail to manage your habits, and negative ones will form. Stephen King writes ten pages every day out of habit. He is so afraid of breaking his habit that he even works on Christmas day. If you do not manage your habits, you will form bad ones, such as overeating, staying up too late, and failing to exercise.

 

#3: DO Add At Least Two Images To Your Text

People expect them on blogs, and people are starting to expect them on regular websites too. There are even people adding images to their terms and conditions on their website. The online audience has come to expect pictures, and they are ideal if you are selling something because around 65% of viewers retain an image for up to three days later. Plus, adding images may help you lead the eye of the viewer so he or she follows the website narrative that you laid out.

 

#4: DON’T Rely On Trends To Decide How You Write

This tip is a little unfair because some content relies on trends. For example, if you write about the entertainment industry (any of it), old information is often useless information. After all, are you really interested in what dress Angelina Jolie wore to the 2005 Oscars? Are you really hungry for a review of Prometheus (it’s terrible)?

Content based on trend has a very short use-life, and some writers are looking for more than a quick web traffic spike rather than a slow-burn trickle of traffic. If you wish to latch onto current trends in your niche, you may use the traffic spikes to build your email newsletter list, so that your efforts have a lasting benefit.

 

#5: DO Leave Your Article Three Days And Re-Read It

You will find that your proofreading read-through catches more errors three days after writing your piece than it did during your post-writing read-through. You are a poor judge of your own work (and its written quality) because you have formed an emotional attachment to your own work. The buzz phrase for this phenomenon is, “Pride of Authorship.” One of the reasons so many writers have editors and proofreaders is because such people have no emotional investment in the work, which makes it easier for them to spot its flaws and errors.

 

#6: DON’T Confuse Style With Adding Fluff

Is there a difference between fluff and style when it comes to adding fluff? Is all insertion of style a form of fluff? Should we all write like robots? Many people are concerned that their writing is all about style and less about content, which means that fluff is a tricky issue.

The previous paragraph was almost all fluff. It added neither useful information or entertainment value. Style is only applicable when/if it makes reading the article easier, more entertaining or more worthwhile. Look back on every paragraph you have written and ask if it could be omitted or summed up in one sentence. The fluffy paragraph above could have been rewritten as, “Do not write like a robot, add a little personality and style without being fluffy.”

 

#7: DO Write Specifically For Your Target Audience

This means alienating some people so you avoid alienating your core consumer. If you are writing about media studies, you should use terms such as structuring, framing and fourth-wall breaking, even if it seems a little esoteric. If you are talking about comic book movies, you should be throwing references that only movie lovers will understand, such as, “The Iron Man 3 rug pull with the Mandarin was as welcome as the true-love subplot in Hancock.”

Avoid alienating your core consumer. For example, if you are writing about gaming, you shouldn’t be writing about anything with an “ism” or it will alienate your core consumer. Gamers typically do not want to read the word, “Racism” in a Resident Evil 5 review, or “Sexism” in a Deadpool game review. Woman’s weekly magazine readers may like to read about how Link from Zelda has struck a blow for “Feminism,” but that is not typically what gamers want to read.

 

#8: DON’T Listen To “All” Of Your Commenters

Remember that your commenters do not speak for your silent majority. Your subscribers, page views and repeat visitors speak for your silent majority. Remember that your content “HAS to be disliked” by some people if you are targeting others, which means some comments are very unhelpful. Just look at the work of great writers such as Napoleon Hill, Stephen King, Quentin Tarantino and Guillermo Del Toro. There are groups that love them with all their hearts and others that hate them with a passion.

On the other hand, some users will lodge genuine complaints via your comment section, especially if you change something and your hardcore fans don’t like it. Be careful which comments you take in and which you ignore.

 

#9: DO Address Your Audience Personally

Use “You” instead of “One.” Your job is NOT to show off your writing skills, it is to appeal directly to your target audience. Writers are not like artists, since artists create work and then ask people to love it. Writers find what people love and then create.

Leave “One” for academic and poetic pieces. If you are a blogger, then use “I” because your blog is a personal statement from yourself. If you are professional article writer, use “you” and never reference yourself because content in the first person tends to sell for far less.

 

#10: DON’T Forget To Try New Things

Trying new things is tricky because you risk alienating your core target audience, and people tend to be very resistant to change. Think of all the times Facebook has changed, and think of all the times you have heard people say they do not like the changes and they are never using Facebook again, yet those same people are still using it today. Trying new things is the only way you will evolve as a writer, but you also risk turning away your loyal readers. If given the choice, try different styles and different topics when you are writing for other people (such as when you are guest posting).

 

In Conclusion

If you become a full-time writer, you are going to undergo several psychological changes as time goes on. Writing is a very solitary job where you are alone with your thoughts for a large portion of the day. Psychologist Timothy Wilson of the University of Virginia and Gilbert Quoidbach of the National Fund for Scientific Research in Belgium have proved that we change perpetually change on a psychological level. You need to appreciate that writing will change you in negative and positive ways. You can use this to your advantage if you repeatedly find new ways of improving your written quality and writing process, such as by reading advice articles like this one.

 

About The Author

kate simpson

Kate Simpson is the talented head of the editing team at the Assignment Masters. Alongside her vital editing duties, Kate also contributes her own insights as a writer of AM news columns.

Filed Under: Blogging, content

5 Secrets For A Successful Blog

November 11, 2016 by Marc Guberti 6 Comments

5-secrets-for-a-successful-blog

The journey towards a successful blog is full of twists and turns. With so many ways to approach your growth strategy, blogging can feel like a blessing or a curse. It’s easy to become overwhelmed and lose sight of what’s most important. The purpose of this blog post is to help you prioritize.

To ensure the growth and success of your blog, focus on the following five strategies:

 

#1: Growing Your Email List

Your email list is your most valuable asset. Gaining more subscribers to your blog or newsletter should guide nearly all of your business initiatives. Everything I do for my business has a focus on growing my email list.

For example, each visitor to my blog is greeted by a welcome mat offering a free ebook: 27 Ways to Get More Retweets on Twitter. Similarly, if a visitor clicks on the ebook image via the sidebar, he or she is sent directly to a landing page.

When I share content on social media, I try to include a post promoting my landing page (but remember to keep self-promotional posts to no more than 10% of your overall content). On YouTube, I include a CTA and link to my landing page in the video’s description.

If you don’t have an email management system and are worried about the costs, MailChimp offers a free option for up to 2,000 subscribers.

 

#2: Outsource Most Of Your Tasks

If I attempted to do everything for my business myself, my work-life balance would suffer. While I do a lot of work for my business, the work of my freelancers combined surpasses my own efforts. Freelancers schedule my social media posts, create images, edit my content, and much more.

If I had to take on all of these responsibilities, I couldn’t spend as much time writing and promoting great content.

Pareto’s Principle states that 80 percent of results come from 20 percent of efforts. Outsourcing the other 80 percent of your efforts makes it easier for you to maximize the results you get from the most important 20 percent and focus on what’s important.

 

#3: Consistently Write Valuable Content

Never underestimate your audience. They have access to millions of blogs with fresh, consistent and valuable content. Their expectations are high. Your blog needs to stand out among the competition.

Consistently writing valuable content is not optional. You won’t survive, let alone thrive, online unless you consistently provide your audience with something of real value.

Set a publishing schedule that you can stick with. As your blog gains credibility, you’ll attract guest contributors who can help you keep your content fresh and interesting. Blogs that are updated several times daily enjoy a dedicated staff of writers and regular guest contributors.

Consistently writing valuable content will result in returning visitors and the type of Google love that will put you at the top.

 

#4: Build Relationships

If you’re the only person leveling up your blog, it will only spread so far. While it’s possible to build an audience and increase traffic on your own, it’s much easier when you’ve built the right relationships.

Begin to build relationships with bloggers in your niche if you aren’t doing so already. Some relationships will grow so strong that these influential bloggers will start promoting your content to their own audiences, and your traffic will multiply.

There are plenty of ways to build relationships, but nearly all successful relationships with influencers begin with you doing something to get noticed. Sharing an influencer’s content, commenting on their blog posts, or asking them questions are just a few ways to get their attention.

Lately I’ve been building relationships by inviting people to be guests on my podcast. Getting influencers to participate in your podcast is perhaps the best way to get a free consultation session while tapping into a wider audience (guests often share the episode with their own fans and followers).

Remember that satisfying relationships benefit both parties. Influencers can see right through selfish intentions. Build relationships based on genuine interest and think about how you can give back.

 

#5: Sell A Product

Imagine that you’ve taken the time to grow your blog and email list, but don’t have a method of accumulating revenue. A blog with millions of visitors per month that never generates revenue isn’t as good as a blog with 10,000 monthly visitors that accumulates revenue.

If you don’t have your own product, start with affiliate links (but don’t rely on affiliate marketing exclusively for long-term profits).

Eventually you should be publishing your own ebooks, offering training courses or creating your own products and services.  You will always have more control over a product that you create compared to an affiliate’s product.

While service-based offerings can be profitable, products likes training courses and books literally enable you to make money while you sleep.

 

In Conclusion

Blogging is a complex venture with many avenues for growth. If you find one profitable path, and stick to it, you’ll achieve success faster than bloggers who change direction again and again.

But regardless of which path you chose, these five essentials will make or break your blog. I learned about these five essentials the hard way. Before I optimized my blog for email subscribers, I only gained 300 new names from my first 150,000 visitors. If I had focused on my email list from the start, that number would have been closer to 10,000 subscribers.

If you haven’t yet implemented one or more of these five strategies, now’s the time to get started. No regrets! Rather than focus on could-haves and would-haves, concentrate on the opportunities ahead — the sky’s the limit.

What are your thoughts on these five blogging essentials? Have any others to share? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: blogging, blogging tips and tricks

Episode 15: How To Achieve Personal Freedom With Rob Cubbon

November 9, 2016 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

On today’s show, I chat with Rob Cubbon, a successful Amazon author, personal development guru, and entrepreneur. From being stuck in an office job in 2006, Rob now enjoys a happy, enjoyable lifestyle. In this episode, he takes us through how he got from the past to present day. 

Rob joins Marc to discuss his unique take on business, and why he strives to make his life as interesting and enjoyable as possible, while growing his personal brand. 

A key component of Rob’s life is to enjoy things, and enjoy the present moment, as much as being engrossed by goals and targets.

Rob takes personal branding seriously, and shares with us why he finds it just so important and key to his success. Listen in to hear about Rob’s unique journey, and as always, our guest’s favorite quote!

Important links from the show:

www.robcubbon.com – Rob’s Website

www.robcubbon.com/freecourses –  Rob’s free courses

www.robcubbon.com/free – Rob’s free eBooks

Learn:

—Why growing an email list is so key to growth

—The importance of personal branding

—Advice for budding entrepreneurs 

—3 Tips for transitioning from being employed to leaving and working on your own project

—Rob’s favorite inspirational quote

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

How To Create A Content Calendar

November 4, 2016 by Marc Guberti 4 Comments

create content calendar

A content calendar is a necessary part of a solid content marketing strategy. From idea generation and promotion to follow through and analysis, an editorial calendar is the engine that drives a strong and successful blog.

Planning what kind content to create, when it should be published and how to promote it eliminates the guesswork and lets you to perform at a higher level.

Let’s say you publish a blog post. Your content may be live, but how will you promote it? If you don’t know the answer to that question, you’re missing an important piece of strategy. Be sure to plan out your promotional efforts before you publish or you will not likely see a return on your time and efforts.

Editorial calendars help you focus on topics that resonate with your audience, pinpoint ongoing themes and anticipate how to market each piece of content.

 

Include Content Type and Promotion in Your Calendar 

For your blog to really benefit from an editorial calendar, be sure to include content type/idea and marketing. Using a simple template like Trello lets you assign specific topics to particular days of the week throughout the month. You can also plan time for drafts and revisions.

Not only will a calendar decrease the chance of writer’s block and save you time on idea generation. It also provides a specific date for each post, video or any other form of content, which helps keep your content fresh and consistent.

Once you’ve decided on the type and timing of each piece of content, you should turn your focus to promotion. While some of those efforts will overlap, each piece of content is unique and your approach to marketing may change accordingly. Tools like Trello and others allow you to choose where each piece of content will be promoted and with whom, for example, on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, your blog, etc.

Let’s say that next Wednesday, you’re publishing a blog post about Twitter. You may want to promote it only with the Twitter segment of your email list and/or to share it on Twitter 2-3 times that day or week. You may also choose to share a piece of content on Facebook only, or use paid promotion for something else. Being as specific as possible keeps you organized and makes it easier to take action in a timely manner.

 

Plan REALLY Far Ahead

Once your blog has become an important part of your brand and business, you should take it as seriously as Elon Musk takes Tesla and SpaceX.

When creating your calendar, try to plan at least three months ahead. Identify what type content you’ll produce over the next three months. Then decide when to publish and how you will promote each piece. Planning at least three months in advance makes it easier to align your content with your overall objectives.

In the past, I promoted training courses but my own blog content did not align with those efforts. For example, the week I promoted a copywriting training course I’d also written a blog post about traffic generation. Another time I tried to sell a course on self-publishing but had published a blog post about social media.

This was not intentional, but it was still a mistake. I should have planned my content according to those promotional efforts. Once I became aware of this error, I began planning my own content according to the training courses I promote on a regular basis.

 

Align Content with Your Overall Objectives

Rather than publish random blog posts, I started writing posts to supplement and reinforce my promotional efforts. I published two such posts, finding time to create a training course and making training course creation a breeze, during the same week I was promoting a course about how to create successful training courses.

The result? Increased audience awareness and retention. By offering content on the ease of creating a training course, and finding the time to do so, my audience was more receptive to the promotion.

While people often resist paid content precisely because of the price tag, most training courses are worth every penny. If you follow the instructor’s advice from start to finish you’ll end up crushing it. These courses teach you how to achieve a certain goal using every possible method. But I digress.

My new content strategy offered both free and paid content and reinforced the topic in readers’ minds. Supplementing paid content with free content increases interest in the subject, provides a teaser and increases expectations and the rate of purchase.

 

Be Consistent

My content calendar includes a vlog idea on Tuesdays and Thursdays, a blog post every Friday, and a Q&A video every Saturday. Every week, every month. Consistency helps you build and maintain an audience of people who regularly consume your content. An editorial calendar lets you work with weekly and monthly themes and keeps you on point.

 

Create Content In Advance

I have a policy to have at least one month’s worth of content scheduled in advance. Having that month long buffer gives me peace of mind and lets me focus on crafting valuable content without feeling pressed for ideas or rushing through the creative process at the last second.

Once the process in is place and works naturally, double down on your efforts with extra content. For example, record two videos rather than just the one you’ve scheduled. If your weekly blog posts have been written well in advance, see if you have time to write an extra one. The more content you have in reserves, the more you can begin experimenting with publishing content at an accelerated rate.

 

In Conclusion

An editorial calendar gives you a clear picture of what content you should produce, when it needs to be published and how to promote it.

Planning well in advance allows you to align your content with your product launches or any affiliate content you promote.

If you are a serious blogger, you absolutely need a content calendar. The cool thing about calendars is that there are many tools available online, and some are free. You can also Google “December 2016 calendar” and simply print out a template.

Whether you use a digital or paper calendar, always print it out and keep it on your desk. This will ensure that your calendar is always visible and accessible, and will strengthen your commitment to following through.

Have you created a content calendar? Are you thinking about creating one? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: content marketing Tagged With: content calendar, content marketing, editorial calendar, Trello

Episode 13: Finding The Next Wave Of Consumer Demand With Mike Michalowicz

November 2, 2016 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

On today’s show, I interview 4-time best selling author and super successful entrepreneur: Mike Michalowicz. As someone who was stuck in a job he hated, and a life that didn’t quite work him, Mike strived to change his outcome. He suddenly left his job and pursued the path of entrepreneurship. With all that knowledge garnered over years of hard work, Mike gifts us serious nuggets of brilliant insight and information throughout the episode.

Listen in to hear Mike talk about his journey, driven in large part by fear. He went from knocking on people’s doors to selling his multi-million dollar businesses to Fortune-500 companies and the like. We follow on from that listening to how even the greatest rises to success can be filled with failure and why even after having that great initial success, lifetime success is not guaranteed.

We are fortunate to be given insight into the ups and downs of Mike’s business and how it’s come to be. After we explore those ups and downs, we then hone in on finding the next wave of consumer demand. Mike goes into greater detail about that in his book Surge. 

There’s references to his other books for any Mike Michalowicz fans. Mike’s high school nickname is also mentioned for any uber fans of this successful entrepreneur. 

I’ve known Mike for a long time during my entrepreneurial journey. I have heard him speak multiple times and gotten to know him very well. It was a pleasure to have him on the show.

 

Important Links from the show:

www.mikemichalowicz.com – Mike’s Personal Site

http://www.mikemichalowicz.com/store — All of Mike’s books (including Surge)

 

Learn:

– Mike’s advice for breakthrough entrepreneurs

– Mike’s favorite inspirational quote

– Why you should prioritize action over information

– 3 tips for spotting the next big wave in consumer demand

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 152
  • Go to page 153
  • Go to page 154
  • Go to page 155
  • Go to page 156
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 392
  • Go to Next Page »

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

Listen to the Podcast

Click here to grab your FREE copy of "27 Ways To Get More Retweets On Twitter"

Copyright © 2025 · Genesis Sample on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in