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Friday, June 17, 2011

Blogger Blog Tips

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Blogger Blog Tips


4 Success Secrets of Infamous British Author, Jeffery Archer

Posted: 17 Jun 2011 07:07 AM PDT

This guest post is by Aman Basanti of www.Ageofmarketing.com.

Love him or hate him, there is no denying the phenomenon that is Jeffery Archer. With 27 book titles to his name and international sales passing $250 million, Archer is a phenomenon.

So what can a man as successful as Archer teach you about blogging success?

Lesson 1: Blog about what you know

We have all heard that you should blog about what you love but, according to Archer, you should blog about what you know.

"I always say to people," said Archer in an interview, "don't write about goblins; don't write about wizards just because they're in. Write what you feel at ease with. Write what you feel good with."

He gave the example of Jane Austen, whom Archer believes wrote well because she wrote about what she knew.
"Always remember Jane Austen. [She] lived in a small village, and wrote about her mother being unable to get rid of four daughters. Then she wrote about her mother being unable to get rid of three daughters. Then she wrote about her mother being unable to get rid of two daughters. Then she wrote about the daughter.

"And genius—you have to turn the page not only because of her wonderful command of language but because she wrote about what she knew about."

Lesson 2: Be persistent

Archer's first book—Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less—was rejected by 13 publishers before being accepted. The 14th gave him a £3000 advance. Most people would not have had the persistence to keep trying after the first five or six rejections, maybe nine or ten if they were pushing it, but Archer kept pushing.

What was persistence worth to Archer? At last count, Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less, has sold over 27 million copies worldwide. And that is just one of his 27 plus books.

So do not lose hope if a few blogs turn down, worse yet not respond to, your guest post submissions.  Do not lose hope if your blog does not open with a bang. Your big break might only be a submission away. Imagine if Archer had given up after the 13th rejection.

Lesson 3: Be a storyteller

The next lesson is that you do not have to be a great writer to be a successful blogger—but you do have to be a great storyteller.

What is the difference?

"I tell audiences all over the world," explains Archer, "that a writer is someone who is very well educated, who has a tremendous command of language. Patrick White is a classic example. He is unquestionably, unquestionably a great writer, won the Nobel prize and he's brilliant."

A storyteller, on the other hand, "begins once upon and a time, and prays."

While his definition of a storyteller is a little vague, the point he makes is clear. You do not have to have a MA in English to tell a tantalizing story but you do have to tell a tantalizing story to be successful blogger.

Lesson 4: Understand the importance of the inner circle

A woman once asked Archer how he got through his prison sentence.

"I just want to know how did you get through those two years being confined in a cell when you had the world at your feet? How did you get through? I mean, I know if I was put in a jail cell I'd probably commit suicide, I couldn't survive.  I just couldn't do it."

"I promise you," replied Archer, "you'd be fine if your friends stood behind you. I promise you'd be fine. I was inspired by and kept going by my friends. If they'd run away from me, if they'd deserted me, you're right – I'd have gone under, I'd have given in. But they kept me going."

This is probably the most important lesson. In order to survive as a blogger, you need someone to believe in you. You need someone who shares your mindset, who thinks it can be done or at least will support you till you find out either way.

You look at most successful people and they have all had someone who supported them through their journey. Goethe had his brother, who sent him money nearly his whole life. Stephen King had his wife who never complained. Jeffery Archer had his friends.

But it does not have to be someone you know personally. You can find an online community, like this one, which will keep you positive and connected.

Have you applied these lessons in your own blogging career somehow? Share your thoughts in the comments.

Aman Basanti writes about the psychology of buying and teaches you how you can use the principles of consumer psychology to boost your sales. Visit www.Ageofmarketing.com/free-ebook to get his new e-book – Marketing to the Pre-Historic Mind: How the Hot New Science of Behavioural Economics Can Help You Boost Your Sales – for FREE.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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4 Success Secrets of Infamous British Author, Jeffery Archer

A Comprehensive Post on SEO

Posted: 16 Jun 2011 01:08 PM PDT

This guest posst is by Kole McRae of Office Buddha.

I'm a blogger now but in a former life I did SEO professionally. As a part of the industry I've seen first hand the insane amount of misleading information available. Even so-called "professionals" have been known to give out absolutely terrible advice.

That's why I'm writing this article. I want to finally teach you bloggers the truth behind SEO and how to rank well in Google. Some of the following information might be obvious and some of it might seem strange, but stick with me. If you follow my advice you'll be ranking number one in no time.

The information I'm going to give is specific to Google, but the same tips will also help you rank in Bing and all other search engines.

Meta tags

Meta tags are a part of the HTML of your page that appear in the header. There are hundreds to choose from but only two matter when it comes to HTML: the Title tag and the Description tag.

Some people talk about the Keywords meta tag but Google has made it clear that they completely ignore it. It doesn't hurt to have a keywords tag, but don't assume it will help you rank in Google.

The Description tag

This is what Google (sometimes) uses to describe your site in the search results. It's shown in the screenshot below.

This does not effect your rankings, but it can be used to help entice people to click on your link in the search results. Make sure it is relevant to your site, and describes what people will find when they click your link.

As you can see in the screenshot, the term that was searched for will show up in bold in the results. You can use this to help get more clicks—but don't abuse it.

The Title tag

The Title tag is (sometimes) used by Google as the main text of your link within the search results, as seen in the screenshot below:

The words used here have been proven to help with rankings. Basically, the closer the keywords are to the left edge of the link, the better the result will rank for those keywords. For example, Geek Juice: Canadian Tech News won't rank as well as Canadian Tech News by Geek Juice for the term "Canadian Tech News."

"Sometimes"?

In both instances I said that Google sometimes uses these tags. This is because they sometimes use other sources. Google may display content from your site instead of your chosen description or title tag if Google's algorithm believes it is more relevant. Google may also use content from DMOZ (the open directory project.)

Keywords

The tips I've seen online for on page SEO range from ill-conceived to downright frightening. People tout keyword densities and other strange points of data as the be-all and end-all of SEO. In reality Google hasn't used keyword density in years. Stuffing a million keywords at the bottom of your page won't help; some believe Google actually penalizes sites for this.

As long as you mention a chosen keyword once or twice within a blog post, you'll be fine. The important thing is that the rest of the post is about that keyword. Google has figured out a lot of very complex ways to make sure your post is about the keyword you've chosen. For example if you're talking about the keyword "Toronto Raptors" you'll probably mention basketball and scores and various other basketball related information.

The best thing you can do when it comes to keywords is simply talk about the things you love.

Building links

Google first built its search engine on the idea of page rank: a page was probably relevant if a lot of people linked to that page. The more links to that page, the better. Early in Google's life this approach was easily spammed, and to this day people continue to try and gain PageRank.

You've probably heard advice such as putting your link into blog comments and forums, and within your profile on social networking sites. The problem is that these days these links are all marked as "no follow" links. "No follow" tells Google not to use this link within its determination of the site's ranking. So in the end, these links count for very little.

The only real way to build links is to create great content that sites want to naturally link to. The issue is that if you are a new blogger, your chances of getting a link are slim to none. There are ways to build them though…

Guest posts

Guest posts (such as this one) will almost always produce a really high-quality link to your site. Don't guest post just anywhere, though. Google likes it when sites that are similar to yours links to you. So guest post on blogs that have similar themes.

Contests

Running a contest where you give something away is a great way to naturally product lots of links.

Viral content

If a single post or image of yours somehow gets to the first page of Reddit or Digg, you are guaranteed to get tons of links pointing to your site.

Social signals

Both Google and Bing have admitted to using social signals within search results. This is getting more and more prevalent.

However, it's still a brand new part of SEO, and it hasn't been thoroughly studied yet. What I can suggest, though, is that you make sure you have a Twitter and Facebook account and that you interact with your followers regularly.

Ultimately, all this advice amounts to one tip for achieving good search rank: create great, high-quality posts and interact with your readers regularly.

Are you doing this already? How's your search rank looking?

Kole McRae started Office Buddha, a resource for those working 9-5 jobs that want to reduce stress, get more done, find more time for the things they love, and all around become happier.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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A Comprehensive Post on SEO

Admin 18 Jun, 2011


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