Great Find: SEOmoz Beginner’s Guide
Filed Under Basics, Great Finds, SEO, Successful Blog, Survival Kit, Tech/Stats | 3 Comments
Great Find: SEOmoz Beginner’s Guide to SEO
Type of Article: A Series of Articles on SEO
Permalink: Beginner’s Guide to SEO
Target Audience: Any blogger who is curious about SEO and how it works
Content: SEOmoz, a Seatlle-based Search-engine organization has put together this series to help individuals, organizations, and companies who have little to no experience with search engine optimization and want to learn the basics of how search engines work. The organization states their goal as to improve your ability to drive search traffic to your site and debunk major myths about SEO. We share this knowledge to help businesses, government, educational, and non-profit organizations benefit from being listed in the major search engines.
From this list it appears that they take their goals very seriously. The first four (in purple) give you a quick look at what you might be interested in further down the line. All of the articles are short and written in clear, plain English, so they’re easy to follow and, well, interesting to read. Take a peek.
This is one fine reference to add to your library. It’s nice to bump into an SEO org that wants to share what it knows in such an organized fashion. Thanks SEOmoz.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
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Great Find: Tlog Blogging Tips Series
Great Find: Tlog Blogging Tips Series
Filed Under Basics, Blog Review, Checklists, Great Finds, Successful Blog, Survival Kit | 2 Comments
Great Find: The Tlog Blogging Tips Series
Type of Article: A Growing Series of Articles on Setting Up and Running a Blog
Permalink: The Blogging Tips Series
Target Audience: Any blogger who wants to think about blogging or rethink the direction his or her blog is going.
Content: Pedro Timoteo, the Tlog owner and developer of this series is a network administrator. I’ve read through these posts and they put out in sequence the step-by-step basics of blogging. It’s well worth looking over for a thorough blog review. The organization has a programmer’s knack of parsing out knowledge in manageable chunks. They are delivered in language that is clear, accurate, and respectful of the reader. This belongs in everyone’s survival kit.
Look at this list.
What’s not to love about this? The thought that went into this series shows in the list alone.
AND there’s a whole blog beyond this.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
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Sunday Night Blog Discussion
Filed Under Business Life, Comments, Community, Successful Blog, Survival Kit, Trends | 6 Comments
For those who come looking for a short, thoughtful read, a blogging life discussion, or a way to gradually ease back into the week, tonight I offer a Blogging Discussion.
This one’s serious.
Here you go. . . .
This week the Blog Herald reported that WashingtonPost.com has turned off comments on its blog . . .
“Because a significant number of folks who have posted in this blog have refused to follow any of those relatively simple rules, we”ve decided not to allow comments for the time being,” Jim Brady, executive editor of Washingtonpost.com, wrote on the subject.
In August, Aaron Wall of SEO Book fame, was sued for comments left by someone on his blog . . . a good discussion is covered at The Intuitive Life Business Blog ( which I found via the Blog Herald) in which writer Dave Taylor says
“I’m well aware that legal precedent holds that if you moderate, edit, or prune comments on your online forum — or blog — in any way at all then you stop being able to defend yourself as a common carrier and become a publisher who is, indeed, liable for the content that they publish.”
My question is this.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Darren’s 18 Blogging Lessons +1–Backwards!
Filed Under Basics, Community, Great Finds, Successful Blog | 10 Comments
Yesterday Darren Rowse at Problogger wrote the best piece on the 18 lessons he’s learned from blogging. I was with him on every one, but our order differs. That’s the story of being ME.
I’ve frustrated everyone by being a right-brained, abstract creative thinker. Research shows that people like me get our ideas whole. So when teachers would say, “Show your work.” I didn’t have any work to show. I’d have to show the work I thought they would do. This ended up in my developing a sort of mirror image kind of thinking.
When I was an executive, my CFO was crazed with my spreadsheets. I could do the numbers, but I explained them the opposite way in. To him, the explanation was backwards. When my products returned unexpectedly well on their investments, he named my spreadsheets the Voodoo Test of Viability. So with that in mind, I offer you my own take on and rewrite of
Darren’s 18 Blogging Lessons +1 Backwards!
This work is proof that the 18 points Darren has already stated so well will return on their investment. They stand up to the CFO Voodoo Test of Viability–Liz restating them backwards. Just to kick up my personal challenge, I’ve added a Bonus Lesson at the end.
- 18. There are no rules. . . . And there are no absolutes except for that one.
17. Be Yourself. You’ll only be a bad facsimile of anyone else. Readers come for authentic insights, new ideas, and quality writing. As their host, your attention should be on your visitors, not on someone you’re pretending to be.
16. Make Mistakes. Testing 1, 2, 3, Testing. Kick your curiosity up a notch. Failing fast and failing faster are two great ways to show you’re learning. Never try things, and you’ll never fail. You’ll also discover nothing, and stay in the same place forever.
15. Get a Life. And make sure it’s your own. Getting a life means having one thing that you really like to do. Find something that causes you to lose all track of time and space while you’re doing it. Spend time with people who make you feel like you have more energy, not less.
14. Beware of Hype. And don’t get righteous. Whenever an emotional response begins to rear it’s head remember that the blogosphere doesn’t need any of us to make it run right. Handle disagreements offline and steer clear of controversy. End of story. Amen.
13. Don’t Read Your Own Press. And don’t become your own fan. Your blog is not you. It is just your words on a screen. Know the difference. You’ll have perspective and blogging will be more fun.
12. Establish Boundaries. Show you know the world is watching. Understand that just as you are not your blog, your readers are more than the comments they leave. Keep in mind that your stats count lurkers who read you but don’t identify themselves. Do what my mother used to say to do, “Keep the family business in the family.”
11. Relationships are Key. You can’t have a relationship if you don’t show up. Post and hide isn’t blogging. It’s holding readers at arm’s length. Be around when they comment. Make a point to visit their blogs. Take an interest in the community. That’s what blogging relationships are about.
10. Be Light on Your Feet. Presto, Chango, Time to blog. The beauty of blogging is its flexibility. Use it to create opportunities. Have a great idea? Add a feature. Try a test. It’s easy to see whether it works and fast to change it, if it doesn’t.
9. Have a Backup Plan. But don’t use it as a way to quit. This is just darn good advice whether you’re problogging or doing anything in life. Just be careful that your backup plan isn’t permission to quit when things get tough.
8. Don’t Spread Yourself Too Thin. Or you’ll be pulled like a guitar wire. A start up of anything takes longer than maintenance. Allow for that. Start with only as much as you can handle. Then add on the rest as the work levels off.
7. Diversify. But don’t try to do things that you don’t know how to do. If you move into areas you don’t know, you add a learning curve to an already heavy load.
6. Target a Niche. And call it home. Make sure it’s something that you’re passionate about. Remember in school when you had to narrow the topic to write about it? This is what you did that for.
5. Provide Value. That means never losing sight of what readers hold dear. The only way to know what readers value is by listening to them.
4. Differentiate Yourself. This is not school. After all those years when being different got you made fun of, now is when being different pays off. Make your blog a one-of-a-kind, memorable experience–whether it’s the content, your take on things, or your effervescent personality. Have something your readers won’t find anywhere else.
3. Use the Power of Exponential Growth. See what you’re doing as an investment in the future. Everything you do contributes to what you will be. Darren shows how his investment grew over time. Even if it isn’t about money. You’re still investing. Everyday you work at it, you get better.
2. Work Hard. The lottery is won by other people. Hard work shows, and people recognize it. They say when you blog you’re writing for your next boss. He or she is reading your work and going to hire you. More importantly, what you learn from hard work is something you will always have.
1. Be Lucky. But know that not all luck is good. “If you count luck in the mix, be sure that you count on both kinds,” a friend of mind always says. Not bad advice.
Bonus Lesson: Remember You’re Not the Only One. Help out the new guy. Just like your blog isn’t you. You aren’t the blogosphere. Nor is it likely that you will dominate it or even make a massive and lasting change in it. But if you help out the new folks who come along, you might make the blogosphere a smarter place, a community where people actually have relationships and share what they know as a matter of life.
That would be so COOL.
Thanks Darren for giving me reason to think about all of this.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Blogging Hypothetical Question 5
Filed Under Bloggy Questions, Business Life, Community, Successful Blog, Survival Kit | 28 Comments

For those who come looking for a short, thoughtful read, a blogging life discussion, or a way to gradually ease back into the week, I offer this Blogging Hypothetical Question.
Here you go. . . .
A brand new blogger comes to you for advice. He’s convinced he’s going to be the next six-figure problogger.
He asks:
I put Adsense and Chitika on my blog. I’m posting quality, original content daily with a vengeance. I know it takes a few months for the money to start rolling in. How long before I can quit my job?
What’s your response?
–ME “Liz” Strauss
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