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5 Things We Learned Blogging in College — When No One Even Knew They Were Talking About It

January 21, 2009 by Guest Author

A Guest Post by Holly McCarthy

The blogging phenomenon has been growing exponentially over the last several years and has become one of the primary modes of information dissemination in the process. Besides information, people are able to analyze, express opinions, and target specific audiences with which to share their thoughts and feelings.

There are many people out there who have been blogging for far longer than you might think. Many things we consider standards of blogging seemed to have developed out of the ether, so to speak, but they started with these first pioneers of the blogosphere. The thing is, most bloggers did these things and helped to pave the way without even doing it consciously.

Some things we learned blogging in college, when no one even knew they were talking about it:

  • Voice
    The importance of voice in writing is something we learn along the way as writers. It distinguishes us from the others and demonstrates our ability to express ourselves. In some cases, blogs have adopted a unified voice that gives them both authority and credibility, while in others the uniqueness shines through. In both cases, the voice of the author is important and relevant to readers.
  • Relevancy
    As blogging started to grow, young bloggers realized that you had to keep things relevant in order to attract readers. What is the point of writing and putting yourself out there if nobody is reading what you have to say? Common sense dictated that if you wanted to be read, you had to write about what was going on. This helped in the development of niche blogging.
  • Carving out your niche
    Niche blogging came about as a response to demands from the readership. As blogs became more prevalent, the need to get more specific began to arise. Your blog couldn’t just talk about anything and everything; you risked losing your readers if you didn’t maintain some sort of focus. Finding and developing a niche was simply a natural progression toward the blogosphere we now know.
  • Networking
    Another thing that happened along the way was the realization of the importance of networking. Long before all of the social networking and Web 2.0 developments, people had to promote themselves, and this involved developing a network of people with which you shared your posts. Emails were the preferred mode of dissemination, and we tried hard to get our content read. It was the only way to make sure that what we were doing was getting read — and it allowed for feedback as well.
  • Determination
    In the beginning, all things are a labor of love. With goals in mind and finding new and improved ways to get things written and published, the blogosphere has grown to its current incarnation. The determination of those who’ve worked so hard over the years has paid off, and we are now able to write, publish, develop content, and spread the word with more ease than ever.

We learned standards and quality goals just by doing it. Go figure.

Holly McCarthy writes on the subject of continuing education online. You can reach her at hollymccarthy12 at gmail dot com

Thanks, Holly!

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!

Buy the eBook. ane Register for SOBCon09 NOW!!

Filed Under: Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, blogging, elearning, Holly McCarthy

Perfect Blogs, 404 Errors, and Humanity

January 13, 2009 by Liz


What Makes a Perfect Blog?

When I talk to an organization considering a blog, they often are aiming for a perfect example of the genre. It takes a while to coax them into realizing that perfection isn’t what they think it might be …

  • to their product team, a perfect business blog showcases the product features in shining glory
  • to their marketing group, a perfect blog is one that gets customer attention and participation
  • to their sales group, a perfect blog generates qualified leads for products that sell and stays sold
  • to their design team, a perfect blog is aesthetically pleasing
  • to their coders, a perfect blog has no 404 errors
  • to their lawyer, a perfect blog is far from controversial
  • to their CFO, a perfect blog costs next to nothing
  • to the CEO, a perfect blog is one that does all of those things
  • to their customers — it connects them to people, ideas, and answers.

In that sort thinking, a perfect blog is something different to everyone.

My experience is that we do best when we move thoughts of perfection to paths of connection. People talking to people is what turns a blog into a community.

The perfect blog is code filled with humanity.

How do you bring the human connection into your blog?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!

Buy the eBook. ane Register for SOBCon09 NOW!!

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blogging, LinkedIn, social-media

The Fairy BlogMother Lorelle

September 27, 2008 by Liz

Once Upon a Time at WordCamp Portland . . .

On the Worldwide Day of Play, Lorelle VanFossen gave her Keynote at WordCamp Portland as the Fairy BlogMother.

Amazing in every way!

Live TV : Ustream

How did you play today?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!

Get your best voice in the conversation. Buy my eBook.

Filed Under: Community, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blogging, Lorelle-VanFossen, WordPress

When Kings Get Stuck in Their Own Kingly Story . . . MSM, Blogging, and Social Media

July 4, 2008 by Liz

Step Away from Your Thinking

The Living Web

In a conversation yesterday about the decline of print newspapers, my husband asked a simple question . . .

My Husband: They report the news. It’s their business. Why didn’t they see it?

ME: Some did. But mainstream media kings believed in the power of the monarchy.

When kings reign over a silent audience, they might believe they have the only voice. The sound of other voices could become unconceivable. It’s easy to see how they might get stuck in their own story.

Another Kingdom that Wasn’t Listening

Two hundred years ago, a king thought he had the only voice that mattered . . .

In 1775 relations were souring between England and the American colonies. Colonists felt overtaxed and treated unfairly. Still looking to save the union, the colonists extended an Olive Branch Petition to King George III.

We your Majesty’s faithful subjects of the colonies of New-hampshire, Massachusetts-bay, . . . in behalf of ourselves and the inhabitants of these colonies, who have deputed us to represent them in general Congress, entreat your Majesty’s gracious attention to this our humble petition.

The union between our Mother Country and these colonies, and the energy of mild and just government, produced benefits so remarkably important, and afforded such an assurance of their permanency and increase, that the wonder and envy of other Nations were excited, while they beheld Great Britain riseing to a power the most extraordinary the world had ever known.

George III refused it. He issued a Proclamation of Rebellion. He called them traitors

Whereas many of our subjects in divers parts of our Colonies and Plantations in North America, misled by dangerous and ill designing men, and forgetting the allegiance which they owe to the power that has protected and supported them; after various disorderly acts committed in disturbance of the publick peace, to the obstruction of lawful commerce, and to the oppression of our loyal subjects carrying on the same; have at length proceeded to open and avowed rebellion, by arraying themselves in a hostile manner, to withstand the execution of the law, and traitorously preparing, ordering and levying war against us: . . .

A year later the colonies signed, The Declaration of Independence.

When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

Each year on July 4, the United States of America celebrates the independence won in the war this document declared. Suppose George III had listened?

When Kings Get Stuck in Their Own Kingly Story

Kings, contrarians, politicians . . . celebrities, bloggers, CEOs . . . preachers, teachers, all of us . . . when we start believing our own kingly stories, we stop listening to the people around us.

We start sorting their voices as we would have them. We stop thinking. We stop remembering that we don’t get to pick how other folks will be.

When the MSM media might have listened, they were selling their own story. Citizen journalist became less than a compliment — it was term to spin their story. What if they’d put down their kingly story?

Now the MSM castle is undergoing expensive renovation.
No kingly group is immune from narrow vision.
Even the most wonderful story can’t control the conversation.

What sort of listening strategy will keep us from getting stuck in our own story?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!

Buy the ebook and get your best voice in the conversation.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: American Independence, bc, blogging, MSM, social-media

How To Win At Blogging and Keep It Real

February 13, 2008 by Guest Author

by Guest Writer Alex Shalman

I have been blogging actively since December 15th, 2006, and have gained a world of experience while doing so. If there was any technique or trick for increasing visitors, or comments, or captivating an audience, I have tried it.

Some people would say forget the tricks, and stick to content, after all, content is king. I’m not here to say whether or not content is the ONLY thing that matters, but I’m here to let you know how to take your content element to the next level.

Be the content. In the beginning of my blogging career, not everyone in my life was actively involved in what I was doing or knew about my blogging. The more I became a personal development blogger in my life, the more that reflected on the blog.

Personal development, meaning constant and never ending growth, is part of who I am in every facet of my life. People close to me no longer think that this is a passing hobby, it’s more of an identity now.

Tell the people. If you don’t tell them, they won’t know. I took responsibility for people not knowing about my site, and actively began telling my friends about it. I would enroll them into all the possibilities of what the site is, and where it is going.

They became excited to be on that journey with me. My friends jokingly say, ‘Hey Alex Shalman, from www.AlexShalman.com.’ I think that’s hilarious! My girlfriend tells everyone she knows about the site, I think that’s precious.

Be your word. Not everyone took what I do seriously, not even after I told them. Two of those people were my parents. Over time, the more I became this personal development person, and the more this made our good relationship a great relationship, the more they believed in the validity of what I do.

The other day we had relatives staying with us, and I caught my parents telling them about the website. My dad even asked me about my Alexa traffic. Now that’s funny, and heartwarming.

From the heart. I remember Liz told me that when I write, I sometimes sound like I’m talking down from a podium. It wasn’t personal. I think this was partly due to me being an inexperienced writer and not having control of what my writing voice sounded like.

Now days I try to incorporate my life, and get as personal as I can, in order to give a part of myself to my readers. This is a much more engaging form of communication, because I’m talking to you, my friend, instead of a crowd of people I don’t know. I want to know you.

Remember to be proud of your work and tell people about it. Be the content, be your word, and blog from the heart.
___________
Alex writes about personal development at AlexShalman.com.

Thank you, Alex.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: Blog Basics, Successful Blog Tagged With: Alex-Shalman, bc, blogging, Guest-Writer, visibility

7 Ways to a Remarkably Powerful, Personal Network of Bloggers

December 27, 2007 by Liz

How to Make Friends with a Blogger

relationships button

Just this week someone was saying to me how surprised they were to find that bloggers are such helpful people. That got me thinking about how much all of you have been for me.

So much of what blogging has been for me is been the relationships that have started in comment box, A network of blogger friends is the hugest benefit of this hobby of communicating with everyone who stumbles upon our url. The folks we meet on our blogs are now the people with whom we’re doing business and sharing our goals.

People say that I’m a connector, here’s how those connections came about.

7 Ways to a Remarkably Powerful, Personal Network of Bloggers

If you want to meet and connect with bloggers, you have to go where bloggers hang out — blogs, blog meet ups, and social networking groups that are blogger haunts. When you get there, know a few things about what we bloggers have in common so that you’ll feel comfortable having something to talk about. Here are seven ways to connect with bloggers.

  1. Use blogrolls. Bloggers are always clicking and connecting. We know the most efficient ways to get from place or person to another. Bloggers recognize like minds quickly and value the connections when we find one. Use the blogrolls on the blogs you read to find new blogs to widen your circle.
  2. Promote bloggers who have great thoughts. The best form of connecting is to show folks what we value about them by sharing it publicly with our friends. We live on the web — a connected set of linked up urls. Link to bloggers who talk about what you’re interest in and you’ll find they’ll be interested in you. Don’t just concentrate on A-Listers. Great thinkers are writing on blogs that just started yesterday. You can help them get going.
  3. Ask for help with a problem. Bloggers are flexible and agile. We’ve picked up the latest and adapt them to our needs — sometimes in ways that the developers hadn’t imagined. When you visit new blogs check the structure as well as the content, when you have a problem connect, connect, connect with bloggers. A blogger will know how to help. A simple question in a contact box with the words “Can you point me in the direction of the answer . . .” will often start a new relationship.
  4. Do something to change the world. Bloggers love to make things better. One of the quickest ways to connect with bloggers is to design and announce a realistic, altruistic plan to improve or support a cause for someone else.
  5. Avoid the wrong side of the links. Some bloggers aren’t the sort to connect up with. Keeping an eye on our zeal to connect is always a good idea. Spam and advertorial content is all some slimy bloggers ever offer. Those connections make a network weaker.
  6. Value every second someone shares with you. Bloggers guard their time. We spend time writing great content, tweaking our blogs and talking to each other. Be authentic, be thoughtful, and be generous when you say hello that very first time. . . . and every time after.
  7. Remember the people; forget the press. A blogger’s life changes quickly over time. In a few months, we can go from being a “newbie” to being someone folks want to know. The first notice by a big search engine, the first time we show up on a top ten list, the first page ranking at Google — these are our academy awards. When it happens to you, don’t let it change who you are. People don’t change their algorithms nearly as often as Google does.

So there they are 7 ways to connect with bloggers to form a remarkably powerful personal network. What they really say is Be real and be about the folks you want to connect with. Show up as who you are from the first moment and you’ll find folks will start wanting to connect to you.

Know any other hints I should add to the list?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Would you like to work with Liz to build your network?

Filed Under: Blog Basics, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blogging, influence, networking, relationships, visibility

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