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3 Overlooked Blogging Tips

June 3, 2014 by Marc Guberti 2 Comments

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

overlooked

I have learned about and implemented a fair share of blogging tips. I wrote a blog post with 100 blogging tips. There are several blog posts on the web that also have their fair share of blogging tips. However, there are three particular tips that get overlooked. While implementing these tips has allowed several bloggers to get over 100,000 visitors every month, most people forget about, under appreciate, or don’t even know about these tips. These three tips get overlooked often, and now you have the opportunity to give them your undivided attention.

  1. Write in a conversational tone. If you want to write better blog posts that get shared more often, you need to write in a conversational tone. You need to include “I” and “You” in your blog posts. The conversational tone will make the visitor feel good because you remembered that the visitor is also a human. In addition, but using “I” more often, your visitor will realize that a human wrote the blog post instead of a robot. Look at a blog post on this blog (like this one) that uses “I” and “You” often. Then imagine what would be different if those words were removed from that blog post.
  2. Write more blog posts. While quality content is important, it is just as important to provide an abundance of content (another way of saying quantity). Writing more blog posts allows your blog to appear for more keywords. If you write a blog post about blogging tips and a blog post about social media tips, those are two different keywords that you blog can appear for. The more keywords your blog appears for, the more traffic your blog will get from search engines.
  3. Use categories to organize your blog’s content. Out of all of these tips, this was the tip that I overlooked the most. You may be on this blog just for blogging tips and have no interest in the social media tips on this blog (for now). If you only wanted to read blog posts on blogging tips, you can go to the Blogging Tips Category and then read all of the blog posts that I put in that category. Categories allow you to specialize your content and give readers more of the information that they are looking for. By giving your visitor what he/she is looking for straight from the get-go, that visitor will stick around which reduces your blog’s bounce rate and moves your blog up on the search engines.

Those are the three blogging tips that often get overlooked. If you have been overlooking these blogging tips for a while, you need to implement them as soon as possible. Implementing these tips will definitely result in a very noticeable increase in traffic. What are your thoughts on the list? Do you have any additional suggestions? Please share your thoughts and tips below.

 

Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: how to become a successful blogger, how to get more blog traffic

The Two Major Components Of Your Blog’s Success

June 3, 2014 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Blogging

There are many components that make a blog successful. Some of these components are getting more blog subscribers, content marketing, and so on. However, all of these small components are subcategories of the two most important components of any blog’s success. If there was a way to measure how successful your blog is, this would be as close as you can get.

The first major component of your blog’s success if how many visitors your blog is getting. A blog that is getting 10 visitors a day is not getting as much visibility as a blog that is getting 10,000 visitors every day. You need more people to know about you in order to have a big presence on the web. This first major component is the more obvious of the two. Content marketing, building a presence on social networks, and improving SEO among other things all contribute to this major component.

The second major component of your blog’s success is what happens when your visitors go on your blog. Traffic exchange sites will make your numbers look bigger than they really are. Although I am not proud of it, I admit to have used traffic exchange sites for one of my blogs (not this one). I was able to get hundreds of extra visitors every day, but those hundreds of extra visitors did not subscribe to that particular blog or buy any of the products being sold on that blog. In addition, using a traffic exchange site hurt that blog’s SEO because Google looks down on that kind of stuff. If you measure a blog’s success based on how much money it brings in, this major component comes into further play. If you get 10 visitors every day, and two of those 10 daily visitors buy your $50 training course, that’s $3,000 every month (this is being very optimistic). If a blog gets 10,000 visitors every day, then that’s 300,000 visitors every month. However, if only five of those 300,000 people buy the same training course, the person who is getting fewer visitors is more successful than the person with 300,000 monthly visitors.

Getting the results you want to see when someone goes on your blog is just as important as growing your traffic numbers. By focusing on these two major components in your blogging strategy, you will be able to get more visitors who will do what you want them to do (subscribe to your blog, buy your product, share your blog posts on their social networks, and so on).

 

Filed Under: Blogging, Success, Traffic Tagged With: blogging tips, how to become a successful blogger

Why Do Spam And Phishing Attempts Always Have To Be So Boring?

June 2, 2014 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

A few months ago, I would have been annoyed to receive spam or a phishing attempts in my inbox. At this time, I would simply come across the email, wonder if this person contemplated life, think about that for a few more minutes, and then delete the message. However, this method is such a boring process with no gain. When I started to get more spam and phishing attempts in my inbox, I decided to be creative.

One day, I got a message from the Facebook Award team saying that on behalf of the United Kingdom, they are giving me 1 million British pounds (hooray for me, right). All I needed to do to get the money was enter my name, address, phone number, age, country, and occupation (but Facebook already knows all of these things). Finally, I had to send this information to an email that had no relationship to Facebook whatsoever (the email address was daniel_moor@live.com. If spammers and phishers are going to try to see my private information and possibly share that private information with the world, then two can play at that game). Let’s not forget to mention that they left me their warmest regards.

The person hiding behind the email address made an earnest attempt to take away my personal information. Although I usually delete emails like this, I somewhat appreciated this person’s efforts. I decided to give this person all of my information:

Full name: Johnny Appleseed

Address: 123456789 Cedar Lane (that’s a lot of numbers)

Phone number: 777-7777-7777 (I am not responsible for anything that happens if anyone calls this number)

Age: 101 (not a teenager)

Country: Planet Earth (try to find me now!)

Occupation: I forgot my occupation (next time, I’ll say that I plant seeds all day)

Then, I simply had to end in style:

Thanks Facebook rewards team. You guys are the best!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Regards,

Johnny Appleseed

I have been doing this ever since. I got another email where Optimum (my email provider) was going to shut down my account in 48 hours unless I gave them my password. These people were a little smarter using the email address customerservices1@safe-mail.net, but I still knew it wasn’t Optimum. The password I sent to them was “NotGonnaHappen.”

Phishers try so hard to take people’s private information. That’s how people get hacked. I take the time of day to respond to these people’s emails, but then the phishers never bother to respond to my emails that I spend so much time on. I wonder why.

These are some of the things I am considering to do for the next person who sends me one of these emails:

  1. Send over some interview questions about why this person spams other people.
  2. If I get another message about some Facebook rewards team, I’ll tell the person that I work for Facebook.
  3. I’ll send over the definitions of 10 words so the phisher can brush up on his/her vocabulary.

The possibilities are endless. Maybe this entire thinking process is the teenager part of me talking, but I have a lot of fun sending out these kinds of emails.

 

Filed Under: Emailing

3 Ways To Establish A Powerful Presence On The Web

June 2, 2014 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

team

We all dream of getting 100,000 visitors every month and having over 100,000 social media followers. However, it takes a long time to establish a powerful presence on the web. Some people quit when they realize it will take several months or even years to reach these standards. Most of these people quit because they do not know how to grow a powerful presence on the web. Whether you are considering quitting for this reason or never had any intention of quitting, it is important to grow your presence. Growing your presence will result in more visibility, but it will also make you feel more confident about what you are doing. These are the three ways to establish a powerful presence on the web.

  1. Focus on one niche. In the beginning, you will want to pay attention to multiple niches. However, you need to find your groove–the one niche–that you are going to establish a presence for yourself in. If you want to establish your presence in 10 different, unrelated niche, a lot of people are going to be confused. If you want to establish your presence in 1 niche, then people who learn about you (from your blog, social networks, and other methods) will immediately know what you are all about.
  2. Build a targeted following for that niche. Once you identify your main niche, you need to build a targeted following for that niche. Having big numbers is not enough. Those big numbers have to be targeted. Targeted people are the ones who are interested in your niche before you come into the picture. When you come into the picture, your new targeted followers will enjoy what you have to offer. If you want to learn how to grow a targeted following on Twitter, read this article too 🙂.
  3. Get those targeted followers to visit your blog. Once you get the targeted followers, you need to get those targeted followers to visit your blog. As you get more of your targeted followers to visit your blog, the search engines will start to kick in and get you more visitors. Some of the visitors on your blog will subscribe to your blog and buy your products. As more people subscribe and buy your products, you will get more reviews. In addition, more of those reviews will be good ones as you get more customers who are already subscribed to and reading your blog.

Those are the three ways to establish a powerful presence for yourself on the web. Remember that although Rome was not built in a day, it was built. Although your powerful presence on the web may not be established just yet, it will be established with hard work and perseverance.

 

Filed Under: Success, Targeted Audience Tagged With: how to become more popular on the web, how to stand out

4 Reasons Why You Must Use Twitter

June 1, 2014 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Although there are over 255 million active users on Twitter, some people do not have their own Twitter accounts. In addition, some people are inactive on Twitter and do not get to unlock the social network’s potential. Twitter is a social network that becomes harder to ignore as the days go by. Whether you are inactive on Twitter or don’t have an account, you must be on Twitter. These are the four reasons why you have to do that.

  1. Twitter allows you to connect with others. On Twitter, you can develop strong connections with targeted followers. Some of your targeted followers will end up buying your products. A larger percentage of your followers will visit your blog and subscribe for updates.
  2. Twitter 140 character limit makes you have longer conversation threads. On other social networks, the character limit is either nonexistent or much higher than Twitter’s 140 character limit. As a result, you and the person you are talking to will have to send more tweets to each other in order to get the same message across with 1 Facebook post. By making the conversation thread longer, you will be able to develop a strong connection with the person who you are talking to.
  3. You can talk with experts in your niche. If you have a question for an expert in your niche, Twitter is the ideal social network to ask those questions. Since you are limited to 140 characters, experts in your niche are more likely to respond to your questions. Since Twitter is a social network of simplicity, it won’t take a large amount of time for an expert to give you his answer.
  4. Twitter is a network of simplicity. The third reason that you should be on Twitter gave a short summary of why simplicity makes Twitter the go-to social network. The reason people are getting trapped on Facebook is because it is not a simple social network. You can use more than 140 characters. In fact, Facebook posts can go over 1,000 characters. That’s too many characters for a social media post. Twitter allows you to quickly read posts and then move on to your notifications or trending topics. While the average person spends almost 7 hours on Facebook every month, the average person is spending less than 30 minutes every day on Twitter. That will save you a lot of time, and the more time you save, the more you will be able to get done.

Those are the four reasons why you must be on Twitter. If your account is inactive, then start tweeting. If you don’t have an account on Twitter yet, then you know what to do. What are your thoughts on the list? Are you on Twitter for any additional reasons? Please share your thoughts below.

 

Filed Under: Twitter Tagged With: why you need to be on twitter

Why It Is Important To Focus On SEO Even When Small Results Come In

June 1, 2014 by Marc Guberti 1 Comment

 

Focus On SEO

SEO is overrated, and there’s no question about it. Many people think of SEO as a way of getting a very noticeable increase of traffic in a very short amount of time. When quick results don’t come in, many people give up on SEO. Little do these people know that SEO is a critical part towards having a successful blog in the long-term.

There are many examples of how blogs went from under 50 visitors every month to getting well over 50 visitors every day. The statistics above are from this blog. Although Twitter has played a big role in those statistics, search engines started to become more significant as soon as traffic from Twitter went up. When I first created this blog (and several months after it was created), this blog got little to no visitors from SEO. I remember jumping up and down with joy if my blog got 5 visitors from search engines.

I am sure there are people who are still not sure about SEO. Some people need the traffic now, and SEO is not a great way to get immediate traffic. Although you may not see your efforts pay off in the first few weeks, rest assured that you will start to see your efforts pay off 6-12 months later. If you plan to turn blogging into your full-time job, then you need to have SEO as a part of your strategy. One of the reasons my WordPress statistics spiked upward is because of SEO. Although it took a very long time to get the spike, the spike did come, and now this blog gets over 100,000 visitors every year.

 

 

Filed Under: Blogging, SEO, Traffic Tagged With: blogging success stories, how to become a successful blogger, how to get more blog traffic

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I am a content marketer and personal finance writer who produces content for individuals, small businesses, and corporations. My content will help drive engagement and sales to your business. I have produced content for several publications, including…

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