Showing posts with label three. Show all posts
Showing posts with label three. Show all posts

Wednesday, 27 March 2013

The Three Essential Components to My Online Posting Business: Blogging, Social, and Email

As writers, we’re always under time pressure to complete more. Whether it’s delivering an item or engaging with customers on the new social networking, the blogger’s task list can appear overwhelming sometimes.

I believe a number of that overwhelm originates from the granularity that we tend to check out our work. While breaking large challenges lower into littler ones is a great way to tackle things, concentrating on the small odds and ends in our work can stop us seeing the problem, and also the natural connections between your individual things we’re doing.

Lately on #blogchat we'd attorney at law about where social networking suits blogging. Should you see that question on the really granular basis—”What will my next status update actually cover?”—then it can be hard to determine where social networking might or may not work nicely. But when you consider the problem, you’ll most likely be more prone to request, “Where doesn’t social networking squeeze into blogging?”

Obviously we want a little more direction than that to sort out the best way to invest our time as writers, so today I figured I’d explain a little about my method of connecting blogging, social networking, and email.

Freeway cloverleaf Image by Phillip C, licensed under Creative Commons

Blogging is in the centre of the items I actually do. My blog is my home base and is how I put the majority of my efforts. My blog is really a place that another company like Twitter, or Facebook or G can’t remove from me basically break their tos or maybe they alter their approach. It’s within my control and it is where I ultimately build my logo and community.

My blog is really a place where conversation and conversion certainly happens, but when I needed to title my primary focus in my blog it might be that it's a place that we use to create content that’s helpful to my visitors.

My hope is the fact that each day on my small blogs, I help solve problems large and small in my visitors with the content I produce there.

My blog is really a place that's frequently the very first reason for connection with people. It’s a location where I really hope I’m in a position to create an impact upon them which will bring them for connecting more meaningfully in some manner.

Social networking is really a place that we mainly use for conversation and community. While this stuff also happen around the blog in comments, I've found progressively that individuals wish to connect and converse off my blog.

I am inclined to concentrate on Twitter mainly, but Facebook has progressively be a place where my photography blog visitors go and G can also be growing for me personally in by doing this.

I actually do use social networking for other purposes—I utilize it to drive traffic towards my blog for instance, I from time to time produce content onto it (particularly on G where I frequently think aloud), and that i even promote my e-books onto it every so often too (although I've found it doesn’t convert anywhere near in addition to email—more with that in just a minute).

Each one of these things can be achieved on social networking, however for me it's more a spot for conversation and interaction.

I’ve discussed the significance of email many occasions on ProBlogger—it may be the best element I’ve put into my blogging since i have began out 10 years ago.

Email does a lot of things for me—it’s a terrific way to bring customers, it can benefit with building community and driving individuals to points of engagement, it can also be accustomed to deliver content. However for me its stand-out benefit has existed driving sales: conversion.

Read this graphic which shows where sales in our e-books originate from.

Email conversions on dPS

You can observe here that:

87% in our sales originate from email7% originate from our blog posts3% originate from social media3% originate from our affiliate marketers.

Since we began to write e-books, I’ve attempted many different ways to advertise them, however the top-transforming method each time I’ve examined continues to be email.

Blogging, social networking and email have  become vital facets of my company. I can’t imagine departing one of these simple elements out.

All of them is helpful in a number of ways—in fact, I frequently use each one of the elements to advertise others, when i find they work nicely to strengthen each other.

For instance, when someone subscribes to the e-newsletter on dPS they have an email soon after that informs them about our social networking accounts. Every so often on our social accounts we promote the e-mail e-newsletter, and that we regularly promote your blog posts we publish there, too.

In delivering people backwards and forwards towards the different aspects of what we should do, I've found they be built-into the city. The brand’s recognition develops among a larger audiences by doing this, but individuals’ connections using the brand deepen, too.

In using this discussion one step or two further, tomorrow’s publish examines some good situation good examples of the methods email and blogging could be integrated to aid a effective affiliate marketing, so I’ll have an interest to listen to that which you think about individuals approaches.

And then week, we’ll be taking an in-depth take a look at how writers are utilizing social media—specifically Pinterest—to support their blogging goals.

The mixing of social networking and email with blogging is a nice topical dilemma for several people, so let’s hear your sights within the comments.


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Monday, 25 March 2013

The Three Emails You Have To Send Throughout a Launch … along with a Fresh Alternative for Writers

Are you ready to launch a product from your blog?

Not an affiliate product, but something you created with your own flesh and blood?

After many late nights spent honing that ebook, ecourse, or coaching program?

Whatever it is, if you’re ready to release that puppy, then it’s time to commit to it and launch it.

Launching is going to disrupt your normal blogging lifestyle. Heck—it disrupts everything, including you and your happy audience’s normally scheduled (and expected) activities.

But I’m here today to give you some good news and the lowdown on what you need to do to keep this disruption to a minimum.

In this blogging primer for launches, you’ll learn:

how to warm your readers up to the idea of you launching a productways to keep the communication non-spammywhen and how to offer pre-launch contenteasy-to-remember basics on “email” marketing during your launch.

You’ll get to see this topic through the lens of known bloggers and marketers, but I’ll also reveal my own use of each one of these strategies and concepts.

So, if you’re ready to turn your blog into a product-launching, money-making, name-taking machine, keep reading!

Many bloggers who have never created and sold their own products wonder how to make the leap and start offering something for sale. Even after you’ve created a product, it can still feel somehow taboo to offer something for sale.

I thought I’d done plenty to warn the world that I was open for business. I wrote an ebook, told some people about it, and then I just let it sit there.

When I was ready to launch for real—with a real program—I had to start over again. Not just because I’d been dormant since my last launch, but because I’d even shifted the focus of my site—drastically.

I went from talking about general personal development and productivity to writing primarily about launching—especially for the first-timers who didn’t feel like they could compete with so called gurus.

There’s really no graceful way to do it. The only rule I’ve seen others follow and that I also practice is this: treat your mailing list, your readers, and your followers as friends coming along the journey with you.

So that’s exactly what I did.

I probably could have made my product sales page a blog post too, but I’ll save that test for another day!

Using this approach, I turned my perpetually inactive blog to an active one and then was able to pull off a moderately successful launch that gave a major boost to my mailing list.

The moral of the story (yes, I’m saying it again!) is: include your list during the first and every launch—and they will come along for the ride.

But what’s really happening behind the scenes? Is it as easy as just those four blog posts and a sales page?

Yes—it is that it easy, but it’s important to include a few other key actions to make sure those posts hit the hardest, and do their job to promote your launch.

Give plenty of lead time. You must warn and inform your audience. Tell them how to interact with you, and how long they can expect the launch to last. Be friendly, honest, and ask for their support. Don’t tell them to buy, buy, buy.Start an interest list early. Segmenting your list is a great way to make sure that if you are emailing your audience, the only people you do email are ones that have clearly said, “I am interested.”“Teach” your readers to take action when you prompt them. Make sure you always ask for people to hit Reply with questions about your emails, leave comments, do some homework based on your latest post, or click to read the post. Think about every communication and every post as a chance to call your readers to take some direct action—click this, comment below, share if you like, answer this question.If you aren’t doing this already, respond to every single comment and email you get. It’s easier to do this with a small list, but even making that effort with a larger list goes a long way.

Imagine you’re about to do a big life project. Would you keep it to yourself until the day before? Or would you tell your friends, family, or partner? Most likely, you would not be able to hold your excitement in that long.

Take the same approach with your readers and you’re likely to get a much warmer response come launch day.

So what happens if you’ve warned people and they still don’t warm up to your exciting pre-launch news?

Your readers are comfortable with how often you show up in their inbox. And every single person who launches a product online deals with some kind of negative reaction or complaints about irregular communication.

People are used to hearing from you once a week. That’s it. That’s all. Then, all of the sudden, you’re sending out emails every day, reminders to grab the ebook for an introductory price, to sign up for the webinar before the spaces are filled.

It’s a little overwhelming, and it can be hard for your readers to switch gears.

The good news is there’s a super-easy way to transition your readers into the messaging and offers you are about to start making (on a regular basis, hopefully).

Here are just a few ways to transition readers and avoid communication complaints.

Add a section that says, “coming soon,” or simply add your free and paid offers to the bottom of the newsletter.

This way, people will always expect that you offer something. You can also add a “coming soon” section to your blog sidebar to make sure the RSS subscribers who click through see what you’ve got.

Here, you can see social media marketing trainer and consultant Alicia Cowan added two of her offerings to the bottom of her very simple newsletter template.

Email by Alicia Cowan

Add a P.S. that explains you’re working on your first product, and maybe a link to an interest page. I’ve done this with new or semi-new coaching offers and had a great response. You could even just say, “Hey, I’m working on my first ebook, and I could use your help. Want to know how? Hit Reply and ask me!”

I first learned this from Dean Jackson. I kept seeing his P.S.s and thinking they were awesome. I don’t use them every single email, but when I’m not sure how to share what I want to offer to my list, I use a P.S. and just ask people to hit Reply.

Email by Dean Jackson

Here’s how I applied it to launch a fairly new coaching service offered on my site. No link, just a simple “Hit Reply if you want to know more.” Did it work? Yes: I booked out all my sessions for two months using this technique.

Email by Anne Samoilov

Make sure to write a blog post about your upcoming launch, and put messages below your post and/or on the sidebar of your blog asking people to sign up for the interest list.

Corbett Barr always mentions what’s coming soon and you can easily read about it in the RSS feed of his site Think Traffic. His messaging comes across as natural, informative, and non-pushy.

For example, in this post he talks about lessons he learned during the launch of Fizzle, an online training membership site. And he links to the sales page—smart and easy. His audience appreciates getting the behind the scenes and he likes sending people to his sales page. It’s a win-win.

Email for Think Traffic

Marie Forleo does a great job of this by changing the bumper on all her Marie TV videos to the next event or project she’s working on.

Check out this example to see her B-School bumper.

Email for B-School

Now let’s talk about the absolute minimum of emails you must send during a launch.

I’m talking here about the only ones that you should write separately from your normal newsletters or emails to your list. Here they are.

This is a simple email that warns and informs your audience that you are doing something outside the norm. Tell them what you’re up to, and what to expect during the launch period. They’ll thank you and won’t unsubscribe.

In this example, not only did I warn subscribers, but I used my favorite spot in the email to do it: the P.S.

Email for Anne and Corbett

Laura Roeder has switched to this kind of straightforward messaging too. Her Creating Fame program now only announces the opening and closing of the program enrollment, or new waves of enrollment.

Email by Laura Roeder

Chris Guillebeau does the same thing with his World Domination Summit. I went back to see if this had changed from the first WDS, but realized he does the same thing every single time. He opens it. Then he warns. Then he closes it.

Email by Chris Guillebeau

First, you may be asking: Do I need to close? What is “closing”?

Closing is simply ending your run of launch material, emails, and the push to promote your product. Sometimes it’s closing enrollment. Sometimes it’s just stopping the hardcore promotion. Whatever you decide, whether you should close your launch is a whole other topic.

Let’s say for the sake of example you’ve chosen to close your launch on a specific day. This can actually be done by sending two emails on closing day. I highly recommend it is two emails sent on the last day: one early in the morning, and one later in the day a few hours before you close.

Catherine Just, one of the members of Fearless Launching, was in the midst of her Soul*full ecourse launch. She was feeling a lag in sign ups at the mid-point in the launch. Though this is quite natural and happens even on higher profile launches, Catherine was bummed. Who wouldn’t be? So, on the day she closed, I suggested she send two emails—one super-early and one later in the day close to closing time.

First, she sent this short and sweet, early-morning email:

Email by Catherine Just

And here’s the longer thank you email she sent a few hours before closing:

Closing email by Catherine Just

The results were outstanding. People new to her list signed up for the program and she got several sign ups in the last 24 hours (and then some on the day after closing).

It was just the right amount of push and honesty to get her readers and new readers to take action!

For some reason—perhaps because they aren’t trying to pull anything, but they get a reaction and cause you to think about your situation and what you struggle with—these email types get very few complaints.

People are like, “Oh okay, you’re open. Cool.” There are only a few options for them. The emails feel nice, respectful, and non-invasive.

Use these emails and examples as inspiration for your own launch. Think about being direct, and think about how your readers are going to react. Don’t be as worried about how well the emails are written. Instead, think about speaking in the voice they know and love: yours.

Throughout this post, we’ve looked at examples of emails, ways of communicating about your launch, and how to warm people up to the idea of your launch. No matter how many launches you do, you need to think about this every single time. Your approach will evolve as your readers and followers evolve.
Here’s how simple your launch can be, when your primary focus is (or has been) blogging.

Spoiler alert: What I’m about to suggest might have you scratching your head and wondering if it’s possible, or if it will even work…

Instead of writing emails for your launch, you could just write blog posts.

In fact, instead of having a separate launch site with launch videos and special launch content, keep it all on your blog: no need for a separate site.

How can you have a product launch without email?

Well, you tell me! Some of the biggest blogger launches have happened directly from the blog.
Think non-invasive, expected, adding value—and posts that are live on your site forever!

Instead of hiding your precious launch content on a separate site, pop it on your blog for the long-term effects to your business and site. If it’s sitting on another separate site, how are you going to keep getting regular sales for your program?

…and many, many more!

This approach makes it easier to build trust, easier to get all your readers’ attention, and much easier to sell them on reading your message. If people are only on your RSS feed, they might not even see a launch email. This approach makes your launch available to everyone.

As I mention above, I did this during my first launch of a program—the first real product I offered from my site. I used the month prior to my open-cart date as a chance to focus on my topic, so I loaded my readers up with articles related to launching.

Derek Halpern of SocialTriggers.com has also done this for the pre-launch of Blog That Converts. When I chatted with him about it prior to publishing the series, I asked him, “So this is like an intro course to Blog That Converts? That gets them ready for the program?”

He said, “Exactly.”

Not only is he setting his customers up to be ready to take his course, he’s keeping the content on his blog, so that there’s no break in the flow of how he normally delivers his content.

He still announces each post via email, but in a very expected way for his audience.

Action point: create a series of posts that cover mini-topics within your program or product.

If you’re feeling a little braver, try a mix of emails and posts. The worst that’s going to happen is that people might tell you that you’re emailing too often.

If you start to see your readers revolt or a flurry of unsubscribes, all you need to do to change your course: space out your emails, turn emails back into blog posts, and so on.

I’m definitely a huge fan of pushing your readers just a little. Don’t go to the extreme, but give them a taste of what it feels like to get these launch-devoted emails. The next time around, it won’t feel so foreign to you!

During the fall 2012 launch of Fearless Launching, I wrote a series of emails for the launch in addition to blog content. Half way through the enrollment period, I sensed it was getting too much from my readers, because they told me so.

This post started an email—and ended up a blog post only! Check it out and see if you can tell where it sounds like an email at first: http://www.annesamoilov.com/email-during-launch/.

I turned a few of the more sales-y emails into blog posts, or just cut them completely. But I wouldn’t have known to do this unless I’d tested and written a few direct emails about the launch.

Action point: Write an email and tell people why it’s important to know whatever it is you’re teaching. Why is this topic important?

If you’re going to test, you better analyze the results, too.

All that means is this: watch your open rate, taking note of which types of emails get opened and which ones do not.

Watch traffic on blog posts and the response to your emails. You’ll need to use your gut at first to understand what all these numbers mean, but that’s okay. If you see that your blog posts get tons of comments and the emails get hardly any opens, you can draw conclusions about what’s best for your audience.

Watch where people click, comment, and speak up. This is valuable feedback. So listen up!

All too often you will learn new strategies for connecting with your audience, for writing a better email, for tips on selling without being schmucky … and you will try them but not spend the time to see how they worked for your business and your audience.

Action point: Make sure you check your analytics account daily during your launch. Look at the number of visits, bounce rates, and most importantly, traffic sources.

There’s a lot of action you could (and should) take from this post, but before you get into any of it, answer these three questions in the comments below. I’ll personally respond and let you know the best next step for you!

Do you have a product that you want to launch, but you’ve been afraid to make the leap because you’ve never offered something for sale before to your readers?No matter what size your audience is, are you getting consistent response, reaction, and engagement from your readers in some form?Have you tried to launch something on your blog and got no response? Can you make any guesses as to why?

Contributing author Anne Samoilov is an online launch + business strategist who coaches overwhelmed entrepreneurs ready to launch. She’s also the creator of Fearless Launching, an online training program for first time online product launchers.  Learn how to launch and build a business based on simplicity over on her blog, chat with her on Facebook, and download her special gift for Problogger.net readers: a launch email resource guide.


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Tuesday, 27 March 2012

Three Easy Video Formats for First-time Vloggers

This is a guest post by Gregory Ciotti of Sparring Mind.

YouTube is the next big thing for blogging.

Seems like pretty poor advice, since everybody is hopping all over Pinterest and people have known about YouTube for a long time.

The thing is, few bloggers are utilizing YouTube to its full potential.

And it’s not just me thinking that: on a recent post on Social Media examiner, many of the 30 experts featured agreed that YouTube was going to see a tremendous rise in use by bloggers in 2012.

Why?

Because YouTube has finally come out of its “Wild West” past.

That means people are taking original content more seriously on YouTube these days—it’s no longer for Family Guy clips and videos stolen from elsewhere.

YouTube partners are making some serious coin, and many bloggers are learning that the traffic generated from YouTube can be big. David Edwards has been pointing this out here at ProBlogger for a while.

Check out the traffic just one of my blogs receives per week from YouTube:

Most bloggers get stuck when it comes to video content, because they’re unsure of what to make. (We’re not all illustrators and animators like David, after all.) Don’t worry, you won’t be forced to make any cheesy comedy videos, or “S_____ People Say” style viral videos either.

We’ll be taking a more serious and proven approach. Let’s look at three kinds of videos you can make to capitalize on the rise of YouTube.

This is a biggie: screen capture videos can bring in huge amounts of search traffic. Why? Because people are constantly searching for “How-To” videos on YouTube, and nothing beats the good old-fashioned screen capture in a tutorial.

If you title your video “How To _______”, get some views on your blog, pick a good how-to topic, and do a great job presenting it, you are guaranteed to have made a video that will give back for years to come in terms of views and traffic.

Not only do your readers benefit, but you get big exposure from the browsing YouTube audience who have the very real possibility of turning into future blog subscribers.

Leveraging your blog’s audience by embedding your video into a post is a great way to ensure you rank well for the “How To” term as well, since view count affects how high videos display in YouTube’s search results.

Get started by checking out programs like Camtasia and CamStudio (free) to record what’s on your screen.

Example video:

This is a great video by Pat Flynn detailing how to create whiteboard videos, so you’ll learn something else too!

You know if you read my blog that I’m a huge fan of interviews to bring in traffic. I’ve done plenty, and they’ve all sent a tremendous amount of shares and links my way:

Interview with Brian Gardner of StudioPressInterview with Rafal Tomal (Lead Copyblogger designer) & Alex Manginig (owner of Kolakube)Interview with Danny Iny, Onibalusi, and Georgina Laidlaw (Content Manger of Problogger)Interview with Leo of the BufferApp

The thing is, as much as I love these text interviews, I’ve seen the obvious benefits of video interviews from a few of my other favorite sites.

Not only are you going to rank well for the interviewee’s name (it’s YouTube after all, and YouTube videos rank easily on Google), but you’ll also get the obvious additional traffic from people finding your videos on YouTube from search and related videos.

Not only that, but having an interview means that anyone can share the interview on their own site, even the person that you interviewed! (It’s like a free guest post on content you already created for your own blog!)

That’s a whole other audience right there with no effort, so you should really consider making your next interview of the video variety.

To get started with interview videos, check out the programs Call Recorder (for Mac) and Pamela (for PC) to record Skype video chats.

Also, look out for a post on how interview videos can help grow your blog here on ProBlogger later today.

Example video:

Two of my favorite bloggers, Corbett Bar and Jeff Goins in a great discussion on writing.

The last video I love to see bloggers using is the classic “talking head” video.

In this style, you are simply going to be facing the camera, and chatting with your audience about advice, tips, a personal update, a story, showing them something live—really, any topic works for these videos.

You can feature someone else (non-interview style) discussing a certain topic, as Derek Halpern did with his videos on blog design.

Or, you can simply record yourself, which gives a really personal take on your content and allows you to mix things up from the standard blog post.

Darren is known to do this himself on his YouTube channel, and you’ll see through the comments that people really enjoy getting a personal take from a blogger via video. Nothing adds “you” to your blog like video content.

To get started with a talking head video, all you need is a camera with video recording capabilities (HD preferred) and a YouTube account, which makes this one of the easiest forms of video to get start with. Darren’s also handily explained the setup he uses for his videos.

This is another topic we’ll look at in detail later today, when an experienced video blogger shares his tips for making talking head videos like a pro.

Example video:

This video example from Amy Porterfield shows how to relay a quick tip via video, using an in-person recording and screen capturing, which we discussed above.

Have you tried out video content yet?

What is your favorite form of video style that I’ve discussed above? Any that you are looking forward to trying? I’d love to hear your thoughts on video in the comments.

Gregory Ciotti is the author of Sparring Mind, a content marketing blog that focuses on research & facts to find what really works in creating valuable content that creates a loyal following. Find out how Greg does things or follow him on Twitter.

Thursday, 5 August 2010

The Three Step Process to Effective Multilingual Keywords

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

The Three Step Process to Effective Multilingual Keywords

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Tuesday, 3 August 2010

The Three Step Process to Effective Multilingual Keywords

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

The Three Step Process to Effective Multilingual Keywords

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Monday, 12 July 2010

Three methods of simple to convert your Blog reach Epic success

Let me ask you a question. Is it really how many visitors your blog receives? You see, when I started blogging online after reading a few books blog hyped up, I had the conversation internal with my brain as most Probloggers e.Groups have when they begin. The conversation sounded something like this:

Monday, 14 June 2010

Difficulties with your Blog? Try these three simple tips

It is difficult to create a blog with success! You can have lots of content and post often follow that all rules of the top bloggers-and still not get traffic, visitors and sales you deserve.

There are three major rules to a successful blog lacking many bloggers relève.Dans this post, I share them with you... and show you how to implement quickly!

Rule No. 1: get a real email autoresponder service until it was too late.

Many bloggers are a critical error: they only icons RSS and/or Feedburner subscription e-mail subscriptions on their blogs.Nous will expand each of these and look at why these are severely hinder your ability to make money with your blog:

RSS icon: blog readers more still do not know what is RSS or how to use it. Unfortunately, even with the advent of Google Reader, RSS is still not mainstream.

Even for technical blogs, I is not yet recommended RSS as the main option.Why? if you are offering products to your audience, you want to create an emergency. Email is that people consider email appears in their most urgent inboxes and often take immediate action. RSS is a more passive method; many blog readers do not read their RSS subscriptions every day. If you are selling products or make a sale limited in time, a subscriber e-mail is worth much more than a subscriber.feedburner email RSS subscriptions: it seems an excellent idea, it is not?You can simply plop a piece of code on your site and Feedburner will automatically email your subscribers of your latest blog posts.

Unfortunately, Feedburner suffers from many of the same issues as RSS.It may take up to 24 hours to send the email, which means that if you are maintaining a sale 1 day, your subscribers e-mail Feedburner peuvent Miss.Also, you cannot send (other than automated) separate e-mails to your list.If you want to remind your list a listing ends or to obtain a product until it was too late, you will need to write an instead... blog, post and then wait up to 24 hours for Feedburner to email .it ' is a bad solution, and I regret ever offer on my blog. (I still have hundreds of Feedburner "blocked" on my list, subscribers are not on my list of aweber).

I recommend aweber for any blogger grave.Certes, their solution costs money .but you will much more money with it … so much more that you pay for the solution.Je aweber $ 66 per month for my 5 500 payroll

Followers