Get Edgy: Contest Ideas to Push ANY Blog to the Remarkable Edge
Filed Under Community, Guest Writer, Motivation/Inspiration, Successful Blog, Writing | 8 Comments
Writing Contests as Edgecraft
Writing contests, I know you’ve seen ‘em so have I. I’m a writer and I don’t have time to enter them. I imagine that most techies and other nonwriters pass them by completely.
If you want my attention, doing two things is important.
Mix something successful from over there to something you have here.
Find the edge of here — be noticed, outstanding, and remarkable.
Seth calls moving out to that remarkable edge edgecrafting. It’s knowing who you are, knowing what business you’re in, and not letting tradition or the perceived risk — that perceived risk that edging out comes packaged in. It’s investing in, inventing, or trying new things to make a mark that will get people remarking about what you’re doing.
A nonwriting blog — say a techie blog — having a writing contest is a remix with posibilities. Curious at the very least, don’t you think? Gotta get past curious to way out there, in order to be at the edge.
I’ve got some ideas . . .
How to Set Up a Contest that Works
Nothing is less fun than a contest where no one shows up. So let’s start with the basics that tilt the balance in your favor.
- Keep the rules few and the task simple.
- Keep the deadline definite and the timeline short, but not too short — a week is good.
- Announce it as many ways as you can. Remind folks daily on your blog. Send out email. Ask friends and colleagues to pass the word. Seek out and list your contest at sites such as competizione.
That being said, what kind of writing context might catch readers’ attention and get them to participate?
I’ve got a few ideas. . . .
Read more
Great Find: List Your Writing Contest At Competizione
Filed Under Branding, Marketing, Successful Blog, Writing | 10 Comments
And the Winner Was . . .
Are you getting tired of finding out about writing contests AFTER they are over? Musingwoman was too — enough that it spurred her to action. A new blog was born so that folks could keep up woth upcoming contests and rules. So, competitors, start your keyboards.
Great Find: competizione
Permalink: http://musing.typepad.com/competizione/
Audience/Topic: Folks interested in announcing or participating in writing contests.
Content: This new blog which started just this month already has a list of competitions, and invites you to send in competitions you’re having so that you can attract more entrants. The guildelines are clearly stated. To briefly summarize them:
Contests can be for blog or for a task — win a ___ by writing a ___.
Information should submitted by email and need to include a link to the contest announcement post, the deadline date, limit to entries (if there is one) and any other pertinent information.
No profanity, pornography, or discriminatory content.
Sites with adult/mature (R-rated content) should be labeled when submitted so that competizione can alert audience visitors.
Contest submitters are asked to link to competizione. The submitter’s site link will remain on competizione after the contest post has been deleted.
Have a contest! It’s a great way to show off your blog and attract new readers. Let Musingwoman tell folks about your contest — free promotion is an excellent deal. It’s a chance to expand your network of relationships. Stretch your brand a bit. I can see your blog growing already . . . yep. Click on the title to see what’s there for you.
A writing contest is even more exciting outside a writing blog. . . . On a techie blog? a real estate blog? a travel blog? Really? You bet. All bloggers have to write, don’t they? Imagine the kind of contest you might invent.
UPDATE: NOT ALL CONTESTS ARE FOR WRITERS — ALL THE MORE REASONS TO CHECK COMPETIZIONE OUT!
–ME “Liz” Strauss
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Leaving Folks Room to Comment — Why I Said So and Why Most of the Time It’s Impossible to Do So
Filed Under Basics, Branding, Comments, Outside the Box, Successful Blog, Writing | 80 Comments
In April — Advice from Readers Yea!
The conversation finally occurred on a Sunday last April. I’d been trying to work out why something was happening. It seemed the more I wrote, the less folks were commenting. Then finally someone said something — a lovely compliment — that put words to what I’d been feeling might be the issue. He said.
I used to comment more than I do now, but she writes so completely that I find it difficult to add my thoughts to hers.
That thought led to me writing, An Open Thought: Please Take the Keys, a post where I said . . .
Please Take the Keys
Movie stars have directors. Olympic athletes have coaches. I’m just a blogger. I have you.
If we’re talking about customer think–brand you and me–what better case study than this blog itself? You can’t hurt my feelings talking about my writing. I know it’s not who I am. I’d like to know how to get myself off the stage and back into the audience again. Will you tell me what you see? Would you do me that favor? Just say YES.
Sometimes the customer needs to be in the driver’s seat. Please take the keys.
How will I learn if you don’t?
And after a few moments of testing the waters. YEA! and Thank you! for everyone who did.
People gave me lots of feedback and great advice. I grew a lot as a blogger that day. Leaving folks room to talk was a big take away for me.
In August — Advice from Liz Uh-Oh
In August when I wrote the post, 10 Reasons Readers Don’t Leave Comments, I was sure to include that — always leave room for people to comment.
I bring it up here because, I have to say that I’ve found that about half the time it’s bad advice. Some kinds of writing need to be complete. End of story.
So I’m here to say that,
It would be silly to leave out part of a how-to post so that people can add it back in as a comment.
It would be frivolous to drop out a fact from a persuasive argument.
You might not want to omit an event in a retelling of a news story.
The only place I’m sure that you can leave room safely is when you’re writing a list post. I’m sorry I gave you bad advice. I’m a long ways from perfect.
By the way, I’m still doing all I can to get off that stage and back into the chair beside you. I still appreciate any help you have on that. I like being eye-to-eye with people I talk to. It’s friendlier.
The keys to the blog are always there on the sidebar.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
If you think Liz can help with a problem you’re having with your writing, check out the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.
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Arlo Guthrie, a Pickle, and 5 Signs You’re Forcing a Bad Idea to Work
Filed Under Content, Successful Blog, Writing | 21 Comments
I Had This Idea about Deadlines
I had this idea Sunday about deadlines and how we sometimes push words and designs out the door to meet them — how schedule beats quality and how that works against us every time.
I wanted a fun example to talk about. So I chose Arlo Guthrie’s “The Motorcycle Song,” and started writing this post. I chose it because the first time I heard someone sing that particular song, I remember thinking that the lyrics are, well, less than inspiring.
I don’t want a pickle.
Just want to write on my motorcyle.
I don’t want a tickle,
I want to write on my motorcyle.
and I don’t wanna die. . .
Just wanna ride my motorcy-cle.
–Arlo Guthrie, The Motorcycle (The Significance of the Pickle) Song
My, wasn’t I smart? Well, no, not even clever. I was in love with my own idea.
Anyone who remembers the song probably already suspects what a truly bad idea that was.
The 9 Rights of Every Writer — Peer Pressure Is for Jr. High School
Filed Under Bloggy Questions, Branding, Business Book, Successful Blog, Writing | 61 Comments
Can’t Stay in My Box — I Never Was Cool
I suppose if I were the savvy one, I’d wait until Monday or Tuesday to write this post. But I’m not. I’m the one who writes when the writing needs to be done. This post can’t wait until Monday or Tuesday, and darn it. It shouldn’t either.
The dialogue around the blogs that I read a lot and among some bloggers that I care about has been around one big question lately that keeps getting twisted and turned.
Do I write about what I know and want, or do I change what I write when I see big traffic come?
It’s time we talk about the rights of a writer. Read more
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