You may think that blogging needs to be some big, time-consuming process that keeps you up at night wondering how you’ll ever compete…but it doesn’t have to be that way.
Like any new skill; learning to write and promote your content efficiently is a simple matter of understanding the big-picture of what you’re trying to accomplish, and then learning the tools & tactics used by the people already having success with it. Blogging is not necessarily easy, but it certainly can be relatively simple.
When strategizing about who you’re writing for, consider that audience’s ability to help spread the word. […] Targeting blog content at less-share-likely groups may not be a terrible decision (particularly if that’s where you passion or your target audience lies), but it will decrease the propensity for your blog’s work to spread like wildfire across the web. ~ Rand Fishkin via seomoz.org
You need to make sure when blogging that your content is interesting for the people most likely to help you promote it. Look for people in your niche that have a strong social following, and a reputation for sharing great content with their followers.
One of the best ways to focus your blogging content on topics that are interesting to influential social media personalities is to quote one or more of those people from within your content; citing the person by name, and then linking back to the original piece where you found the quote.
This blogging practice is useful for all sorts of different reasons. If your blogging content is actually good, people love sharing content that mentions them, especially if it shows them in a good light. There’s also the possibility that the person will even quote and/or link back to your site in a future piece of content they produce.
Most site owners of that caliber will likely have analytics reports, and alerts set up to let them know when someone has mentioned and/or linked to their site, so generally it’s good enough to just publish your content and assume that they’ll notice it at some point. This will help keep you from trying to “keep score”, which is likely a waste of time because your time would be better spent blogging than it would be worrying about who linked back to you and such.
Alternately you could also just send out a quick tweet with a link to your new content and include an @mention to the people you quoted in the post. That only takes a second and you’re likely going to be doing that anyway, so there’s no point not including a mention. In my experience people check their @mention feed more than any other section on Twitter, so that’s almost a guarantee they’ll see it.
…the right way to energize social media isn’t to try to find people to tout your products. It’s to find people who care about the same things you do, and to tell a story that amplifies their voice. ~ Tim O’Reilly via linkedin.com
People don’t care about you, they don’t care about your business, they don’t care about your blog, and they certainly don’t care about your product or service. The ONLY thing that people care about, is how any of those things can help them.
What’s in it for them? That’s all people generally think about, and if you want your blogging to keep them interested then that’s all you need to be thinking about too. Don’t write about the stuff that is fun for you to write about; write about the stuff that answers potential customer questions. This is the difference between those successfully blogging for profit and the millions who will never make any money through their blogging efforts.
In reality, people don’t care about how fun your picnic was and what you had to eat, or how crazy things got at your office Christmas party. Your main customer-focused blogging content has to be 100% about how you can help them. Answer their questions; help them to understand what they need help with.
And if you really want to get their attention; tell them how great they are; not how great you are.
When blogging, tell them why you appreciate them, how you can empathize with them, and why you’re helping them specifically (ie, “I love helping struggling network marketers because I used to be a struggling network marketer and I know how isolating that can be”).
Your readers want you to be authentic and genuine even if that sometimes means being controversial. Nobody wants to read puff pieces from a corporate weasel who’s terrified to offend somebody. ~ Geoffrey James via inc.com
You’re not a politician, so don’t write like one. People tend to hate politicians—have you noticed the approval ratings of Congress?
Take a look around the world at some of the entities with the most loyal & rabid fans. If you look closely you’ll notice that people tend to get aggressively loyal for what their idol is “against” more than for what the idol is “for”.
Rush Limbaugh is against Liberals. Occupy Wall Street is against corporate greed. The NRA is against gun control. Green Peace is against planetary exploitation. NYC Mayor Bloomberg is against large sodas (apparently). Redsox fans are against the Yankees. 7UP is the UN-cola.
Those are just a few random examples off the top of my head and likely not the best ones, but the point is that people LOVE people that take a stand and that is what great blogging is often about.
When blogging, don’t be wishy-washy, don’t waffle, and don’t pander. Your readers will love you for it, and will start talking about how honest and direct you are. When other people catch wind of that they won’t be able to control themselves; they’ll “just have to” see the outspoken blogging master that speaks his mind and stands up for the little guy.
What I’m starting to notice more and more, is that great things almost always start small. Most of us know that Branson started the Virgin brand with a student magazine, but Virgin is just one of many examples which shows that the reality is counterintuitive: actually, the best things we know and love started as tiny things. ~ Joel Gascoigne via http://joel.is
There seems to be this strange human brain defect that leads people to believe that everyone that is successful at something did it practically overnight.
The reality though is that absolutely NONE of them did it over night.
This defect seems to be even more prevalent when it comes to blogging, or anything else internet related. The simple fact is; you’re not going to become a master at blogging overnight. You’re blog is not going to get popular overnight. And people sure as hell are not going to start trusting you, and taking your word for it overnight.
You have to pay your dues. You have to illustrate stability. People don’t want to get themselves all excited and committed to a blog or company that may very well be gone tomorrow. Boatloads of blogs and small businesses go down the drain every day. People like to see that you’re going to be around and blogging for a while before they’ll be willing to put too much effort into paying attention to you (or helping to promote you).
It’s still a hell of a lot faster than trying to do it without content marketing though, so the sooner you get started, the better.
You don’t have to worry about getting big yet. Staying small keeps you on target and keeps you organized. Work your way into it, taking on more and more as your skills grow.
Example #1: Let’s say you have difficulty writing long detailed blog posts. Just cut the project down into smaller segments. Take one of your sub-headings and treat it as if it were its own post; write each section individually, and then join them all together at the end. Its a great blogging technique.
Example #2: Let’s say you don’t add new posts to your blog as often as you should because you dread writing long blog posts. Everyone says that long blog posts convert better, get more links, and get more social shares right? Okay, maybe that’s true, but let me ask you this. Would it be better to have lots and lots of short blog post, or no blog posts at all? There’s no law against small blog posts, especially if you can answer the customers’ questions just as easily (if not better) being direct & concise.
You’ll quickly find out blogging isn’t the science so many make it out to be. When it comes down to it, consumers have questions and a great blog answers them. It really is that simple. ~ Marcus Sheridan via thesaleslion.com
Take the top 50 questions you get every single day from prospects and clients (via phone, email, face to face, etc.) and write those questions down. Now turn those 50 questions into 50 blog posts and answer them exactly as if you were talking to a customer face to face. ~ Marcus Sheridan via contentverve.com
The big secret is that being a good at blogging isn’t all that difficult if you truly do understand your business and your customers/potential connections.
If you’re honest, trustworthy, and can communicate clear direct answers to your target market’s questions, then people are going to love you.
Think about it; when you go online looking for answers to specific questions, do you really care all that much about how well-written the piece is, or do you care about whether it actually answers your questions or not? Blogging isn’t about being perfect, it’s about being real.
You probably won’t get it perfect right out of the box, but if people see that you are genuinely trying to be helpful, they’ll be more receptive, and more likely to cut you some slack. Keep plugging away at it; it doesn’t take as long to get significantly better at it as you might think.
People don’t expect blog posts to be written perfectly; they expect them to be useful (and possibly even a bit entertaining). Instead of trying to talk-down to your target market like you’re a stuffy old suit, it’s likely better to speak to them in their own language. People like & trust people that are like them. Blogging is about being yourself and writing the way that you speak…within reason 🙂.
Blogging can be as time-consuming & complicated as you choose to make it. This is your business; do what you can manage to do, when you can manage to do it.
Trying to emulate the most successful content marketers on the web is admirable, but can often set you up for failure (they didn’t build their blogging empires overnight, and neither will you replicate them overnight).
Instead of trying to measure yourself against them, study their tactics and focus on what you can learn from them to make the whole process more efficient for you. Better to have a small, focused content presence, than to have no blogging presence at all.
If you want to read some other recent popular blogging posts then you might want to check these posts out below by clicking on them:
If you enjoyed this article on blogging then please feel free to like and share it around. It might help others and I would appreciate it. Please do get in contact with me if you have any questions on internet marketing or blogging.
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