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How to create sitemap for Blogger blog – Blogger sitemap XML

Posted in Blogging By Sureyea

Creating sitemap in Blogger - Blogger sitemap XMLA Sitemap is nothing but a list of accessible pages in your website. Sitemaps helps search engines like Google, Yahoo and Bing to easily crawl pages in your site which helps in better index. As a blogger you must create a sitemap so whenever you make a new post search engines can crawl and index them easily. In this post let's see how to create sitemap for Blogger blog and submitting it to Google webmaster tools and in robots.txt.

Default Blogger sitemap

By default your blogger blog will have sitemap, but the issue with that sitemap is it only shows your recent blog posts (example). A perfect sitemap is that it should contain the list of all you pages so that search engines know the complete structure of your site. Let's see how to create sitemap for Blogger blog.

How to create sitemap for Blogger

Creating sitemap is very simple and this sitemap works for both self-hosted Blogger blogs and normal Blogger blogs. Just use this (atom.xml?redirect=false&start-index=1&max-results=500)next to your blogs URL. See example below.

http://yourblogname.blogspot.com/atom.xml?redirect=false&start-index=1&max-results=500

Now you have created sitemap for your Blogger blog, but you need to tell search engines about your sitemap so that bots can know your site structure. There are two ways to tell search engines about your sitemap.

1. Showing your sitemap in robots.txt file and 2. Submitting your sitemaps in Google webmaster tools

Adding your Blogger sitemap in robots.txt file

Login to your Blogger blog and go to dashboard >> settings >> search preferences and edit the custom robots.txt. Enable and paste the following text and click save changes. Make sure to change your blog name in Blogger sitemap below.

1User-agent: *
2Disallow: /search
3Allow: /
4 

How to create sitemap for Blogger - Blogger sitemap XML

So whenever search engines crawls your site they will access your Blogger sitemap from robots.txt file.

Submitting your Blogger sitemap in Google webmaster tools

Login to your Google webmaster tools and select you website. In your site dashboard click sitemaps below. Now click add/test sitemaps, add your sitemap (just the atom.xml?redirect=false&start-index=1&max-results=500) and submit your sitemap.

How to create sitemap in Blogger blog

That's it you have successfully submitted your sitemap in Google webmaster tools. Now it's ready for crawling and indexing. You can find the number of pages crawled and indexed in Google webmaster tools.

Blogger sitemap - Submitting sitemap in Google webmaster tools

If you like then also submit your Bloggers sitemap to Bing webmaster tools.

Hope this helped you on how to create sitemap for Blogger and submitting it in robots.txt and Google webmaster tools. Please leave your comments below.

How to create sitemap for Blogger blog – Blogger sitemap XML

By Ehijoshua (Jboss) → Monday, 20 October 2014

The 5 Best Free WordPress Plugins to Promote Your Blog

The plethora of free Wordpress plugins are one of the biggest reasons why Wordpress is my favorite blogging platform. Wordpress is also very easy to customize to your preferences. Blogging is a great marketing strategy with many additional benefits and the free Wordpress plugins below can make it easier to promote your blog.

1. Mailchimp

Building a mailing list is a great way to build engagement with readers. Mailchimp is my preferred email marketing product. The Mailchimp WordPress plugin enables you to embed an email sign up form on your Wordpress blog. Once you start building your email list, you will have an audience to send your content or products too. A mailing list allows you to retain the audience you acquire. You can learn more about Mailchimp by watching my free video tutorial video here.

2. Pretty Link

According to the the plug in's developer, Pretty Link enables you to "Shrink, track and share any URL on the Internet from your WordPress website. Unlike other link shrinking services like tinyurl, budurl, and bit.ly, this plugin allows you to create short links coming from your own domain!" Pretty Link is great for masking affiliate links and for verbally pointing people to a certain page. For example, if you are doing a Podcast or public speaking gig, you wouldn't want to point people to a really long complicated web address, or even tell them where to search. Make it as easy as possible for people by creating an easy to pronounce and read address.

3. Google Analytics

According to it's developer, "This plugin makes it simple to add Google Analytics to your WordPress blog, adding lots of features, eg. custom variables and automatic clickout and download tracking." Google Analytics is one of the most essential tools for anyone who is serious about blogging. It enables you to track and analyze all the traffic you get on your site so that you can tailor your future content and promotion strategies. If you use Google Analytics and WordPress, you will need this plugin.

4. Yoast WordPress SEO

This plug in makes it easier to search engine optimize each of your blog posts. It's one of the most popular WordPress plugins and is extremely easy to use. No need to have any programming skills, or even any advanced SEO knowledge, this plugin provides an easy to use interface for entering data that will help you rank higher on Google. This plugin alone is one of the biggest reasons to use Wordpress instead of another blogging platform.

5. SumoMe

SumoMe is a great tool for marketers that has a variety of valuable applications. The List Builder application allows you to display a customizable pop up window to viewers of your blog. The pop up window is a great way to build your email list and it integrates with Mailchimp and other email marketing products The Share application is similar to Digg Digg, but with a sharper design and you can choose not to display how many times the page has been shared. You might not want to display how many times it has been shared if the number is low (it would make you look unpopular). The Share application is a great way to get more shares and shares are a great way to get more traffic.

The Smart Bar is similar to another popular blogging tool called HelloBar. It allows you to create a highly attention grabbing graphic bar at the top of your site. You can use the bar to drive email sign ups or traffic to something you want to highlight. SumoMe has a few other great applications and they seem to be constantly adding new ones. SumoMe is a very comprehensive plugin with a ton of value.

Conclusion

Wordpress' ecosystem of plugins are part of what make it such a valuable blogging platform. The above free Wordpress plugins are my personal favorites. They can be used to get more traffic to your site, including: building your mailing list, getting more social shares, and increasing your search ranking. If you want to learn about how to install and use WordPress plugins, check out my video course, here.

The 5 Best Free WordPress Plugins to Promote Your Blog

By Ehijoshua (Jboss) → Saturday, 18 October 2014

The Big Password Mistake That Hackers Are Hoping You'll Make


PASSWORD


You're smart.

You don't use passwords like the perennial 123456 and qwerty. Or even slightly better ones, like Cassie86 or Cubs1908. Because you put some thought into them, your passwords are better than those, right?

Maybe. But unless you avoid a little-known mistake recently uncovered by password researchers, there's a good chance your passwords will still be far easier for hackers to crack than you think.

Can you tell how strong a password is?

To see, try to figure out which of these four are a pushover for hackers.

Zdhkqjbu83
74Xmbgdapw
Bmukwes3901!
lw;62v74y

Spoiler: They're all an easy mark for hackers, even though every one is 9 or more characters long and contains a mix of both letters and non-letters. How can such apparently strong passwords be so weak? The short answer is that they follow some of the most common patterns of composition that people use to create passwords, patterns that weaken them.

Beat the clock

How does a hacker get hold of your password? Most likely, through a breach of a customer database like the one that recently let criminals obtain confidential celebrity photos from Apple's iCloud. (According to Apple, the iCloud database itself was not breached). Since many passwords are stored in such a way that they can't be directly read by people, hackers often use software to crack them. The longer it takes to crack a password, the less likely the hacker will succeed. If it takes too long, the hacker may give up and move on to easier prey.

As I explained in Hack-proof your passwords, which I wrote when I was Technology Editor at Consumer Reports, long passwords comprised of a variety of letters, numbers, and special characters can better withstand cracking software than can short, simpler ones. However, when something about a password's composition is too predictable -- it begins with an upper case letter, for example, or includes a recognizable word -- it can be cracked much more quickly.

Games users play

Just how predictable are people in composing passwords? Even when they're following an organization's password guidelines regarding length and mix, it turns out, most compose passwords in very similar ways.

In a 2013 study for DARPA (the Federal Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) called Pathwell, security consulting company KoreLogic found that, among the thousands of users within an unnamed Fortune 100 company, roughly half had relied on just five patterns to compose their passwords and 85 percent had relied on just 100 patterns. (KoreLogic found similar predictability within a variety of other companies).

Here are the three most common patterns KoreLogic found among the thousands it identified in those companies:

• One upper case, then 5 lower case, then 2 digits (Example: Dulith57)
• One upper case, then 6 lower case, then 2 digits (Example: Abugmar64)
• One upper case, then 3 lower case, then 4 digits (Example: Itio1981)

Which of these mistakes do you make?
It's not practical to try to avoid every one of the many patterns KoreLogic found. But you can still create better passwords by steering clear of some of the most common mistakes people make:

• Starting with an upper case letter followed by lower case letters
• When a password isn't long enough, adding a letter or two to the base word
• Putting digits, especially two or four of them, before or after the letters
• When a special character is required, using "!" and putting it at the end
• Not using two special characters in the same password

Don't rely on password checkers

When creating a password, you may be tempted to use online password checkers to test the strength of those you're considering. Beware: When I tried four of the most popular checkers, How Secure is my Password, Password Meter, Microsoft's Password Checker, and Kasperky's Secure Password Check, only Kaspersky's clearly informed me that the apparently strong password I submitted was actually far weaker than it appeared. Even Gmail's own password strength tester labeled that password as "strong."

How to make passwords less predictable

I won't suggest any compositional patterns here because, once published, they would immediately become a target for hackers. Instead, here are a few rules of thumb to keep your passwords from becoming too predictable:

• Avoid beginning the password with an upper case letter -- or maybe even any letter
• Create an acronym using the first letter of each word in a memorable sentence, as suggested by security expert Bruce Schneier -- example: t2cmlp,@yh ("Try to crack my latest password, all you hackers")
• Resist your natural tendency to mimic familiar words and phrases
• Use multiple special characters in the same password
• Don't always place digits adjacent to each other

The Big Password Mistake That Hackers Are Hoping You'll Make

By Ehijoshua (Jboss) →

How the Internet Reinvented Opportunity

The Internet changed everything.

Stay-at-home moms are earning a living on Etsy selling handmade crafts, teenagers are out-earning their parents by partnering with brands to promote their products on Vine and Instagram, and entrepreneurs are earning a living by creating digital products online. These aren't your typical Silicon Valley techno geeks and they're not creating elaborate social networking sites. This new class of entrepreneurs are regular people like you and me.

The Internet completely changed commerce and as a result it reinvented opportunity. Up until a decade ago in order to sell a product or service you had to build a brick and mortar business, take out thousands of dollars worth of business loans (assuming you got approved), and pray that it all worked out. Nowadays it's a whole new ball game.

In recent years teenagers, 20-somethings, mid-lifers and senior citizens across the globe have explored the new era of digital commerce. This allows anyone to create a product once and resell it an infinite amount of times. Never in the history of business has an entrepreneur had so much leverage and such little risk.

One company that has been on the forefront of the evolution in digital commerce is ClickBank. ClickBank is the world leader in performance marketing of digital products, with six million clients and distribution in 190 countries. They specialize in being the go-to, easy-to-use platform for entrepreneurs and small businesses, enabling and encompassing powerful online and mobile e-commerce across a wide variety of lifestyle categories.

In the new age of digital commerce, ClickBank is helping empower people to share their knowledge with others through the creation of digital products, but it doesn't just stop there. Product developers are also empowered to make products of all kinds outside of education and how-to oriented products. Many of ClickBanks' most successful products are in the health and fitness, home and garden, parenting and families, cooking, food and wine categories.

Much of the success many ClickBank product creators have is driven by a desire to strive for financial security by building a business. This was the case with Joey Atlas.

Joey Atlas is an expert fitness trainer. In 2004 he owned a personal training studio. He worked 5:00 AM - 9:00 PM and had no time for himself, his family or his friends. A year later he decided to create information products he could share with the world, not just the people in his community. "My aim was to replace my in-person income with a more passive, online income," Joey said. "By 2012 I had surpassed my goal several times over -- and it continues to grow as we speak. I now have a business and life that most people envy -- and can only dream of. I'm no longer a slave to other people's schedules and demands. Rather, I now decide how I spend my days and what pursuits I want to explore."

Can your story resemble Joey's? Absolutely. The technology is available. The platform is available and the demand for digital products is exploding. So what's stopping you from pursuing your passion and what's stopping you from meeting your true potential?

Rather you're a burnt out corporate citizen, an educator or anyone from any background, the Internet now gives you the opportunity to achieve success like never before!

To read an exclusive interview with Clickbank CEO Matt Hulett visit: icanbesociety.com/clickbank

Michael Price is the author of "What Next The Millennial's Guide to Surviving and Thriving in the Real World" now available at whatnextquest.com. Watch the trailer below:

How the Internet Reinvented Opportunity

By Ehijoshua (Jboss) →

How To Make Classified Website Which Makes You Money

By


Undoubtedly, large classified ads websites such as Craigslist or Oodle are one of the most visited and popular sites on the web. Because of the immense targeted traffic, they are highly profitable.

You may think that you have no chance to compete with them, but since classified business is huge, there is always place for everyone. However, you have nearly no chance to compete with these giants, so you need to make specific websites.

Here are some tips on what sort of classifieds site you can build to be successful.

  • Niche – Make one for a theme. For example, one for toys, types of cars, bikes, car parts etc.
  • Local Listings – Create one for a city, district or for a county. Local job or real estate listings can be highly profitable.

If you build the ones above, you will have a better chance to outrank the big ones and offer more valuable service for advertisers and for the buyers.

What are the best platforms to create a classified website?

You do not have to be an expert considering that there is various software you can use. There are free and paid ones. You can find scripts which are standalone ones and there are extensions for different content management systems. No matter which you choose, you will find easy to create your classified website as in most of the cases these tools include all the functions you will need,and you will only need to learn how to use them effectively.

I think, the best solutions are WordPress classified themes or plugins. If you have ever used WordPress, you know how flexible and user friendly it is. A classified theme is an out of the box solution. You only need to install the theme, and it turns WP to a complete classified site with all the function that are necessary and with proper layout and style. Plugins are a bit harder to use as they add necessary functions, but you will need to find and customize a theme.

Here are some of the advantages of using WordPress themes.

  • Easy installation, members and ads management.
  • Users have their own panel where they can add, remove or modify their advertisements.
  • Paypal integration to ask fees for submissions or for featured listings.
  • Built in SEO functions.
  • Integrated Google Maps
  • Customizable forms
  • Auto expire listings
  • Blog section to share related articles.
  • Shortcodes for easier customization.
  • Coupon code creation feature.
  • Customizable email templates.

Moreover, there are some free scripts you can use. The best ones are:

  • Osclass – This is an open source highly customizable script with great design.
  • Noahs – It is one of the most popular free software, it also has a paid version.
  • Almond – Not so well-known, but maybe the best for making Craigslist clone.
  • Open Classified – I think, this software has the best looking layout.

No matter which solutions you will use – open source PHP scripts or a premium WordPress theme – always make tests to find out if they will suit your needs and easy to use for the visitors and members. In addition, use a hosting which is reliable.

  • Test the submission forms if you can customize the fields.
  • Give a try for the members area to see how the advertisers can manage their advertisements.
  • See what sorts of monetization features it offers.
  • Check the navigation and layout to see how easy it is to use.
  • Test the upload functions.
  • Post free or paid listings.
  • Enables to add custom fields.

What are the best ways to get traffic?

If you build a niche or local portal and it is search engine friendly, you have a better chance that it will rank in search engines easier, but without content it is nearly impossible. In order to have content ask your friends and family to posts some ads on your site and promote it on social networking places like Facebook and Twitter. You can also get in touch with other local websites. You can also try services such as Google Adsense.

Starting an advertisement site is not easy, that is the reason most of the sites are closed after some months. You need to promote it as many places as possible continuously and most importantly never give up. Once you have many listings, you will get more organic traffic.

How to make money from classified ads website?

The first thing you have to understand is that you can only make money if you have traffic, so SEO and promotion is crucial to make money. On the other hand, once you have lots of traffic there are many ways you can generate income.

Some of the most commonly used methods for monetization are the following ones.

  • You can sell ad spaces.
  • Placing Google Adsense site-wide.
  • Ask a fee for featured listings.
  • Make paid plans.
  • Offer membership packages.

OLX Classifieds in Uganda is the best example of classified sites from where you can get a lot of ideas.

Conclusion

If you want to make a successful classified website you need to do many tasks, which may be time consuming, but if you do the thing properly, you can have an online business which makes you money constantly.

How To Make Classified Website Which Makes You Money

By Ehijoshua (Jboss) → Thursday, 16 October 2014

1) Use Google autocomplete.

Not sure what to blog about? Type one of your search terms into Google and see what starts to fill in. Often, it's a good long-tail variation of a head term.

2) Mess around on the internet.

If you can't think of what to write, spending some time on social media or non-industry-related sites can help break you out of your rut. It's kind of like how you think of your best ideas in the shower.

3) Go take a shower.

Your best content ideas usually don't happen when you're in a content brainstorm. They happen when you're doing anything other than your job.

4) Talk to Sales and Services.

Ask your Sales and Services teams for FAQs. It's great blogging topic fodder because it's helpful content for your leads and customers.

5) Evernote it.

Keep a running list of awesome campaigns, interesting ideas, and fascinating data that may come to you while you are on a run, at the grocery store, or even just waking up in the morning.

6) Trello-dump it.

Trello's perfect for brain-dumping topic ideas and organizing them however best suits you. You can also have multiple people on the same board or even the same idea "card."

7) Keep a running list of questions.

Whether they come from customers, prospects, colleagues, friends, or your own brain, if one person has asked the question, you can be sure others have thought it. Refer to this list of questions when you're looking for new blog post ideas.

8) Newsjack from RSS feeds.

Create a group of RSS feeds in an RSS reader like Feedly -- just for identifying news to jack. Fill it with news publications and other sites that publish news about your industry. Check it once or twice a day for newsjacking opportunities.

Blogging More Efficiently

9) Use "The Laptop Trick."

If you're on a deadline, go write somewhere without your power cord. Set the time it takes your battery to die as your time limit to finish the piece.

10) Embrace the power of the site:search.

Perform a site:search (if you don't know how, click here to learn) to look up past data points you've cited on your blog or to make internal linking simple. It's way easier than maintaining 8,483,923 bookmarks of the stuff!

11) Browse Factbrowser.

Can't find the data you need? Factbrowser is a data search engine. You're welcome.

12) Make browser shortcut folders like it's your job.

Don't hunt for links to things like your company's style guide, your favorite photo search engine, or your monthly leads report. Organize them into folders in your browser to cut down on time you spend looking for things.

13) Find photos on Creative Commons.

Speaking of finding photos, you can locate some for your posts easily on Creative Commons. Be sure not to grab images that look like stock photos or you'll be breaking copyright laws. Eep.

14) Keep a list of pages to link to.

Internal linking's great for SEO, but annoying when you're finishing up a post. Keep a spreadsheet for the 20 or so pages you want to increase authority for -- just one page for each topic you care about. 

15) Keep a list of a few HTML hacks, too.

We use HTML hacks every once in a while to make content look nicer. Just copy and paste the HTML somewhere for safekeeping and easy reference.

16) Ship now and edit later.

If you need to get something out the door quickly, ship it with small errors, then go back and change them.

17) Use Skitch and Clarify for screenshotting.

You can use these for easy and awesome screenshots. Read more about how to use them in this blog post

18) Create filler text quickly.

If you know you've gotta write something ** over there ** but you don't have the words yet, stop typing textexttexttexttext. You can auto-generate filler text in Word by typing =rand(x,y) and pressing Enter. In this, x and y are numbers of your choice -- for example, =rand(3,4)<Enter> gives you 3 paragraphs with 4 sentences each.

Making Writing Easier

19) Talk it out on Evernote.

Sometimes, it's easier to speak than write. Use Evernote on your phone to translate text from speech. See this in action in this post

20) Crowdsource examples.

Need examples to support your claims? Can't think of any? If you need more ideas for your blog post, ask your social media followers what they think.

21) Set up Google Docs to collaborate.

Gdocs are also great for collaboration with teammates. In fact, this post happened in a Gdoc! We used the Excel one.

22) Turn off your chat clients.

If you're like me, one bleep from a chat client can throw me off my game. When I really need to get some blogging done, I sign out of all that jazz. Stat.

23) Block off writing blocks on your calendar.

Block off writing time like you block off meetings. It'll help you bucket your time more efficiently and prevent you from getting pulled away by the 1,000,000 other things you have to do that just can't wait.

24) Interview smart people.

Freaking out because you're not a subject matter expert? If you know someone who is, set up an interview with them to get your content written. You ask the questions, and they sound smart (and you do, too, by extension).

25) Write like you speak.

Not only is this a better reader experience, it's way easier to write that way. (Because you're being yourself! You know how to be yourself, don't you?) 

26) Email examples to yourself.

If you're always hurting for examples, email stuff to yourself as you see it. Categorize it in your inbox with folders, and just pull from it when needed.

27) Write a descriptive working title first.

It doesn't have to be the final title, but make it reflective of exactly what the post is about. This will help you stay focused on the topic you originally set out to write and prevent pointless tangents.

28) Learn to love the outline.

Outline your post before you write it, directly in your CMS. It helps get you out of a "blogger's block" rut if all you have to do is fill in the blanks.

29) Follow a formula.

A formula that implements all the basic elements of a post is a great way to get started writing. For instance, I like to plop down an intro if it's already in my head, then add my primary and secondary CTAs, the headers I know I want, and, if it's a list post, some of the items I know I want in there. Then comes the preview image, the meta description stuff, and voila! I'm not looking at a blank screen, and I'm less likely to forget all that stuff before I publish. 

Improving Content Quality

30) Use a thesaurus.

It's the fastest way to break out of saying "Great" in every single title ... which is pretty great.

31) Fall back on data.

Not sure how to add validity to a point? Look for some data. Data is a quick way to back up your points without having to explain yourself to death.

32) Befriend a copy editor.

Even if you don't have a full-fledged editorial staff, you can still find someone you work with who has a good grasp of grammar and content and use them as a gutcheck for stuff so you're not flying solo.

33) Leverage your strengths.

Not everyone needs to write their blog posts. Feel free to do whatever's easiest for you -- video, infographics, data roundups, etc. If you have multiple contributors, you'll have a nice mix of content formats.

34) A picture is worth 1,000 words (and then some).

Writing a how-to post? Try to include screenshots when possible. It's amazing how many sentences of explaining and describing one little screenshot can replace!

35) Write for your grandma.

Big words and fancy jargon are not your friends. Whatever you're trying to explain, keep it simple and conversational. Your readers will love you for it.

36) Run stuff by subject matter experts.

If you're not totally sure what you're talking about, ping an expert -- internal or external -- to fact-check your content. It might help spread the reach of your content, and no one hates being asked to flex their smarts. 

37) Title brainstorm with someone.

Title brainstorming is the practice of talking through (or if you're me, typing through) titles. It helps you test different variations and work out kinks. The result is something that's more accurate, SEO-friendly, and clickworthy. 

38) Remember that no one likes reading.

If you can say something in less words, do it. No one likes reading.

39) That also means you should keep paragraphs short.

If it looks hard to read, no one will.

40) Tell a story.

Having trouble with your introduction? Start your post off with a personal story that will 1) make you more comfortable writing and 2) actually provide an engaging opening.

41) Internalize the fact that you are not your persona.

Well, most of you aren't. Get out of your own head. If you're saying things like "I would LOVE if someone wrote that" -- well, it doesn't really matter. Think about what your persona would love, not you.

Improving Your Editing Process

42) Stay on top of the news.

It's good for newsjacking, but also important to be aware of any sensitive subjects that might impact your editorial calendar or content being published.

43) Fact-check newsjacks.

You have to be fast with a lot of your newsjacks, but you should never sacrifice factual accuracy. It hurts your credibility. Take the extra time to check your sources.

44) Don't freak out about revisions.

If you're doing guest blogging, or just working with an internal editorial team, revisions aren't your enemy. They're supposed to make your content better, not signal that you're not a good writer. Don't let it slow your mojo.

45) Don't freak out about giving revisions.

See above.

46) Use Google Docs for feedback.

If you're sending feedback to a contributor, Google docs are a great way to add in-line comments and prevent working off a million versions, which can get confusing and unruly.

47) Create and use an editing checklist.

Instead of wondering if you missed something every time you schedule a post, refer to an editing checklist that can set your mind at ease. Here's one you can use.

48) Create and use a writing style guide.

If you don't have a writing style guide, create one. Or just use this one.

49) But don't stick too hardcore to that style guide.

Make room for other people's writing styles. A blog should be a mix of voices, not an overwrought corporate one.

50) Link to other content for more in-depth explanations.

If you've covered a topic in-depth in the past, link to it instead of re-explaining it (or not explaining it) in your post. It saves space. And your sanity. And your reader's sanity. It's just a general win-win for everyone.

51) Cite original sources (religiously).

Often, you'll come across a statistic or quote on another blog or website that you want to use in one of your posts. But that article may not be the original source of the info. Do your due diligence to find the original source, lest you cite something out-of-date ... or just totally wrong.

52) Organize in Google Calendars.

Use Google Calendars as a free editorial calendar, if you're working with a multi-person editorial team. You can plan ahead, move things quickly, and add people to events as writers or editors.

Optimizing the Performance of Your Posts

53) Check out Google Trends.

Not sure which title variation is more search-friendly? Google Trends helps compare the two terms so you can quickly determine the best choice. 

54) Use link shorteners to see where people click.

Ever wonder if anyone actually clicks images, internal links, or in-text CTAs? Use a link-tracking tool to shorten the link before you hyperlink your text to get some quick metrics and insight. We did it here and learned some stuff.

55) Then, place links strategically.

Every post has natural reader dropoff. If you want people to click stuff within your post, place it near the top or bottom for the most clicks.

56) Make in-post links stand out.

There are two ways to do this: making them bold, and making them longer. They'll probably get more clicks. Read more about why here.

57) Link your images.

People love clicking pictures. We're silly that way.

58) Use CTAs as your content starting point.

If lead generation is a big goal for your blog, use the offers you already have as starting points for blog topics. This will result in a super relevant blog post that segues seamlessly into the CTA for your offer at the end -- increasing conversions!

59) Secure Google+ authorship for your content.

Search engine results with your smiling face tend to get more clickthroughs than those without. Set up your Google+ authorship so you can reap those benefits.

60) Update the CTAs on high-performing posts.

If you have a post that's been rocking it in search engines from a traffic perspective, check that the CTAs are the best they could be. Lackluster CTAs could impact your overall conversion rates, and updating CTAs to current, more relevant ones could help you generate more leads.

61) Add tweet links to tweetable facts.

Data and facts make people sound smart. That's why they tweet them. Make it easy for them to do so, and your post will get promotion from it, too.

62) You can do it using Click to Tweet!

It's an easy, free tool -- and a quick way to add social sharing CTAs within the content of a post.

63) Add social sharing buttons.

Adding social sharing buttons seems obvious ... but only once you already know it. Most people won't grab your link, go to social, and share. Make it easy and you'll expand your reach with no effort whatsoever.

64) Promote your posts on social (even the old ones). 

If a post has worked really well for traffic or leads in the past, and is still up-to-date, repromote it on social media periodically.

65) Customize your blog post promo for each social channel.

Readers consume content differently depending on where they are. Spend time creating visual representations of your posts for networks like Pinterest and Facebook -- and even Twitter, now that it has inline images -- and create custom text for the rest of your Twitter posts and LinkedIn updates.

66) Work your network.

If you mention someone in a post -- an individual or a company -- let them know once it's up. They might promote it, extending the reach of your post.

67) Include the content format type in the post title.

It tells people what they're getting into -- whether it's a SlideShare, a video, an infographic, whatever. Setting expectations properly generally helps clickthrough rates.

68) Don't forget a lead gen CTA.

Duh. But like the tip about social-sharing buttons, it seems obvious ... except for when you didn't know it was obvious. 

69) Don't forget secondary CTAs.

Not everyone's ready to become a lead. Give them other options. Good ones are subscribing to your blog or social follow and share buttons.

70) Use smart CTAs.

Get more bang for your buck with smart CTAs. They're easier to customize and personalize, which means better and more conversions.

71) Use blog content for sales enablement.

Blogging isn't all about traffic and lead gen. It can be used to help move leads down the funnel -- if your sales team knows it's there. Make it easy for them to find relevant posts, and be a resource to help them unearth helpful posts for their prospects.

72) Review topic performance in analytics.

Every couple of months, review which subject matters readers prefer. Then, write more of that stuff. Keep doing it until it doesn't work anymore.

73) Review format performance in analytics.

Do the same with content format types -- infographics, videos, templates, etc.

Finding Quick Sources of Blog Content

74) Set contributor requirements.

If you're short on content, implement contributor requirements from your team. HubSpot started with a monthly quota for the entire marketing team. Do your own version of this.

75) Reposition seminal pieces for niche audiences.

Write an awesome ultimate guide to something? Find a niche audience that would like to hear about that topic, but positioned toward them? Cool, tweak your post! People love content that's highly targeted, and it can help you win coveted long tail traffic.

76) Write easy posts when you're in a pinch.

There are easy posts and hard posts. Easy posts are basic news reporting (with little to no analysis), FAQs whose answers you could recite in your sleep, curated posts for which you already have the curated material, or list posts for which you already know the components. Write these when you're hard up for content, not the difficult stuff.

77) Update the content of out-of-date posts.

The post is already written! You just need to tweak the out of date stuff, and boom -- you've got a post. Read this guide to updating old content for a detailed walkthrough.

78) Change the format of posts.

If you've got a post that performed well, see if there's another content format it can take -- written, video, visual content, and the like.

79) Excerpt lead gen offers.

Excerpting chapters of your ebooks, sections of your whitepapers, and other parts of your lead generation content is a great way to promote those offers. Conveniently, it also provides a quick piece of content that's already written and edited.

80) Ask someone a question via email.

If you ask someone an FAQ, oftentimes, the response is a great little blog post all on its own! The cherry on top is that it's often a really search-friendly post. (And a fun way to trick non-bloggers into blogging.)

Fun Little Tricks

81) Ramble when you write.

Go a little bit nuts with the brain-dump when you're writing a first draft. You can always cut down later. Better to have too much than not enough.

82) Sexify boring images with text overlays.

Establish the colors and fonts that you'll use and it's easy to grab a pull quote from your post and overlay it on an image with a bit of whitespace.

83) Don't underestimate the power of the puppy.

Cute works. If you've got a picture of a cute puppy, kitten, baby, whatever -- and can tie it into your post -- it's a good preview image. You'll notice I used a rabbit in this post. Yeah. Dose of the ol' medicine.

84) Food works, too.

People love to look at delicious food. Get something tasty up there as your preview image if nothing cute makes sense. It works particularly well for social sharing and engagement. Seriously, ask our social media manager.

85) Don't use boring, generic stock photos.

Pick something that pops. That way it'll pop in people's news feeds ;-)

86) Embrace humor.

Even if it seems "unprofessional," it actually humanizes your content. No one doesn't want to chuckle. Especially if they're expecting to be bored. (Wudup B2B content peeps!)

87) Match the length of your list with the depth of your examples.

If you're writing a 3-point list, your audience will be bummed if your explanations are surface-level (like the ones in this post). If you're writing a 10-point list, you can be a little less in-depth. And if you're writing a list of 20, 50, or 100 ... well, you know. This route I'm taking here is just fine.

Maintaining Your Overall Sanity

88) Feel free to end list posts on weird numbers.

Did you start out with a Top 20 list and only have 13 examples? That's cool. Thirteen is enough. Who said everything had to end in 5s and 0s, anyway?

89) Chill out about length.

People are always in a tizzy about how long posts should be. It really doesn't matter. Keep writing til you're done. 

90) Calm down about minor spelling and grammar mistakes.

If your grammar and spelling mistakes aren't impeding meaning, and they're infrequent, it's not a big deal. Everyone screws up once in a while -- just do the best you can.

91) Accept help where you get it.

There are tons of resources for bloggers out there. Use them.

92) Don't ever let anyone tell you that curation is easy.

Really good curation takes a la-ha-hot of time. Every time I've said "I'm just guna write a quick examples post!" I've hated myself for it. Finding the quality examples takes serious research time, as does the formatting that comes with it. Don't bank on these, if you're short on time or unmotivated to blog. 

93) Know when to ship it.

Know what's going to move the needle ... and what's not ... and spend time on moving that needle. Debating the use of a hyphen or a semi-colon in your blog post title? I'm guessing that's NOT going to bring in 1,000 new leads. So learn to let. it. go.

94) Don't count comments.

The quantity doesn't really matter. If you're worried if people are reading your content and find it interesting, metrics like traffic, social shares, and leads generated are better metrics.

95) Don't give in to impostor syndrome.

A lot of people think they can't blog because they're not bloggers. Whatever. Blogging's barely old enough to babysit your kid. It's not that complicated -- just write stuff down.

Parting Advice

96) Blog early. Blog often.

The more frequently you write, the easier it will become. Getting into the habit is the hardest part. Set aside some time to work on your blog in the morning when you're fresh and alert.

97) Limit the ghostwriting you do.

It's not under your name. Lame. Let people blog for themselves. 

98) Don't worry if a post bombs.

It's just one post. The next one can be better.

99) There's enough room for everybody.

Work with the other people writing in and about your industry. You can help each other get to the top better than you can operating in constant battle mode.

100) "Write drunk, edit sober."

Advice from Hemingway himself. Can't argue with that.

100 Tips & Tricks Professional Bloggers Use to Make Their Job Easier

By Ehijoshua (Jboss) →

What Windows 10 Can Teach Internet Marketers

written by Michael Kwan 






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After months of rumors and leaked screenshots, Microsoft finally announced Windows 10 a short while ago. Everyone knew that Microsoft was working on the next version of its operating system and while the official retail release won't be until next year, the Technical Preview is available for download right now.

If you are an Internet marketer or you otherwise make money online, then you're naturally on a computer for a good amount of time and, given the current market shares, there's a pretty good chance that you're using a Windows machine (and even if you're on a Mac, it can run Windows too). Today's post isn't really about the features of Windows 10, but rather what you as an online entrepreneur can learn from Microsoft's journey to this point.

Give People What They Want

Windows 8, for most intents and purposes, has been a bust. As much as people complained about previous versions of Windows, the experience was a familiar one and it lined up with what they expected from Microsoft. Windows 8 veered off on a completely different direction and the people hated it.

With Windows 10, Microsoft is still retaining some elements from Windows 8, but it is largely going back to what the people want. People want the regular Start Menu. People want to have their programs open in regular windows, rather than as forced full-screen apps with the Metro UI. And as an Internet marketer, you can learn from this. It's okay to experiment and it's okay to try new things, but you should always keep your core customers in mind when making any major decisions. Keep the Start Menu and forget about the Start Screen.

Build an Ecosystem

One of the complaints that people had about the previous generation of Windows was that it was confusingly disjointed. Some design elements were a constant, but Windows Phone, Windows RT and Windows 8 were utterly separate from one another.

windows10-family

With Windows 10, Microsoft aims to provide more of a unified platform where your experience is all the same, it all ties into the same accounts and into the same app store. Everything works together in a much more seamless kind of way, which has been one of the appeals of the Apple ecosystem.

As an Internet marketer, it's oftentimes not enough to have a single product with a single focus. That might be where you get your start, but it's not where you'll find your ultimate success. Build a system such that everything works together. In the case of John, he has this blog, his e-book, his videos and his mailing list, all working toward common objectives and common goals. It's a unified approach.

Logic Need Not Apply

Let's address the elephant in the room. How on Earth did Microsoft jump from Windows 8 to Windows 10? Why did they decide to skip Windows 9 completely like that? There are all sorts of theories on that, but the fact of the matter is that your products (and their names) don't necessarily have to be logical. They just have to sell. How else can you explain the success of the Xbox 360? It should have been named the Xbox 2, since going 360 degrees just leaves you where you started.

In the context of making money online, you will need to defy convention and common sense now and again. You have to take some unexpected risks if you want to achieve some unexpected success.

Never Rest on Your Laurels

For the better part of the last twenty or thirty years, Microsoft has been the dominating force in computer software. From DOS to Windows 95 to XP and beyond, they offered the de facto platform for modern computers.

windows10-sample

But Microsoft can't take that kind of success for granted. It recognizes that people are getting frustrated and, slowly but surely, they're losing market share to Apple and OS X. They're struggling in the console wars and in smartphones. Any huge success you enjoyed in the past hardly guarantees any future success you may hope to enjoy.

You need to stay determined and keep working at doing what you're doing… and doing it better. John could have stopped when he was making only $34,000 a month through this blog, but he kept moving forward and now he's cashing million dollar checks instead.

Be Prepared to Fail (Again)

Unsuccessful people assume that the road to success is a one way street with a direct passage to the destination. Successful people recognize that the only way you achieve any real success is to experience a whole host of failures along the way and, even when you make it to the top, you're probably going to mess up a few times too. These are all learning experiences that can help you do better each time.

It's hard to say whether Windows 10 will turn things around for Microsoft or not, but know that if you want to make the big bucks and enjoy the dot com lifestyle, the road is going to bumpy and you could get sidetracked. You just have to stick with it and do better.

Download John Chow's New eBook & Start Living The Dot Com Lifestyle

What Windows 10 Can Teach Internet Marketers

By Ehijoshua (Jboss) →