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The Key to Link Lists and 15 Focused Resource Link Lists

July 18, 2007 by Liz 4 Comments

About Mixing Love and Currency

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Noticing the purpose of a list — who it serves — establishes who values it and for how much. Lists of blogs can be useful or empty. When we build one, it helps to be sure we we know our intent. Andy Sernovitz passes on a great message in his book World of Mouth Marketing, and he also said it at SOBCon07.

Mixing love and money is usually a bad idea.

The Key to Link Lists

Think about link lists. The key to offering a link list that adds value, not just noise is in its intent and usefulness to readers.

An outstanding link list offers readers

  • links the blogger has researched and visited
  • clear anchor text in the links
  • a description of each link
  • a reason for recommending the links, as appropriate
  • a compelling reasons for readers to care

Link lists that serve readers attract relationships as well as backlinks.

A Word about Link Trains Link trains and other meme lists can offer a quick jump in statistics. However, they do this by making forced links — links that didn’t happen through the natural passing on of content. Though the intent may be generous, such meme-lists often get extended without review. They can become a list of blogs compiled to gain rank and without regard to the quality of the list.

Some lists are meant to gain backlinks, page rank or authority may garnering more traffic. Yet the traffic that comes finds a content empty list. So the traffic doesn’t stay. A blogger can start building more lists to continue getting traffic. It’s about traffic not readers. Content has gone away.

15 Focused Resource Link Lists

Resource lists are organized to offer relevant and focused resources to readers. These lists require work beyond coding to exist. Most of these lists are generated by research, formed from the opinion of bloggers, result from a test or algorithm, or are the product of a group project.

Here are 15 examples organized by type.

Group Projects

  • The Metaphor Project
    Fifty ways to explain blogging to someone who doesn’t know.
  • Top 5 Group Writing Project at problogger.
    Over 800 lists of the five best of something.
  • The Ultimate Guide to Productivity Group Writing Project
    Submissions from over 129 blogs on ways to be more productive.
  • Group Writing Project Results: 37 Souces of Inspiration
  • Smart Ways to Use LinkedIn from Linked Intelligence
    37 posts on Ways to Use this tool — the list is organizaed into categories.

Awards and Subject Lists

  • Blogger’s Choice Awards
    This list nominated by fans and voted on by more fans has over 20 categoies of blog, each with countless entries.
  • Aaron Wall’s List of SEO Blogs and Search Engine Blogs
    The extensive list compiled by the guy who wrote THE book on SEL
  • Answers.com List of Blogs for Educators and Blogs with Tools for Teaching
    This list is well organized and ready for a teacher to start using.
  • Ross Mayfield’s List of Venture Capital Blogs
    (He has selected specific posts that tell a story together.)
  • Recruiters Network Employment and Career Blog Directory
    Part of a portal, this list is still handy for those looking for more job sources.

Top 5, 10, 25, etc. Lists

  • 100 Blogs We Love by PCWorld
    Here are our favorite stops in the blogosphere, covering everything from high tech to low comedy and all manner of pursuits in between.
  • Webware 100 – Top 100 Web Applications
    These are the best Web applications there are. We know because you told us.
  • Top 10 Most Practical Blogs for Entrepreneurs
    Scott Allen’s service is “To help you filter that infoglut down to a more manageable level, here is my list of the ten most practical blogs for entrepreneurs.”
  • Top 10 CEO Blogs
    Mario Sundar describes his list, “if you want to get a feel for some big-time thinkers espouse their company’s strategy a bit, then maybe the following ten may be worth a ride. Here goes, my Top 10 CEO blogs . . .”
  • The Top 10 Sports Blogs According to Me
    With all due respect to Ballhype and with full awareness that I’m going with my gut over, you know, actual data, I think my top-10 list holds up, even if it is just a subjective-yet-educated list based on perceived traffic, quality and notoriety.

A list of resource links with ancedotal information makes it easier for readers to find the useful bit and move on. Offering resources that make life easier is a service worth offering. Finding ways to organize the list to help readers save time is a sign of respect and service they’ll notice.

Have you seen a remarkable link post? What sort of link posts do you appreciate? Which ones get you to click away as soon as you see them?

— ME “Liz” Strauss
Can you list the reasons to Work with Liz? Too many. It’s such a good idea.

Filed Under: Successful Blog, Tools Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, decision-making., Strategic-Plans, Strategy/Analysis

All of the Information Available

July 5, 2007 by Liz 16 Comments

Knowing What We Can Know

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Strategy is setting a vision, making a path, knowing what we can know, and planning for the variables. To know what we know . . . That means having command of the information available.

For a while now, new bloggers, mostly those who are younger, have emailed or IMed to ask me the most basic questions. It’s usually obvious from their message that they haven’t done the any research to answer the question on their own. I used to answer and send them on their way again. I don’t anymore. Now I point them in the direction where they might look.

Are they wrong to ask? No.

It’s always good to ask someone who’s been there. Though you might argue when to do that.

But they’re wrong if they rely on me to do their homework. It hurts them for several reasons.

  • I don’t have all of the answers.
  • My information could be dated.
  • I’m wrong as often as I’m right.
  • They’re not investing in themselves.

I’m only one source in a world of the Internet. We often stop at the first answer to our questions. The first answer isn’t necessarily the best. It’s a great strategy to seek out all of the information available.

  • Do a search.
  • Ask someone who usually agrees, someone who usually disagrees, and someone who usually doesn’t have an opinion.
  • Ask an expert.

Having a strategy to find all of the information available at the beginning sets the foundation to build upon. Curiosity is a great teacher.

end of story.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
If you’d like Liz to help you find your strategy, click on the Work with Liz!!

Related
Strategy: 40 Outstanding Blog Links, Bookmark Carefully!
20 Blog Promotion Guides to Inform Your Strategy
Strategy: How to Get Maximum Benefit from Complex Link Lists

Filed Under: management, Strategy/Analysis, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, decision-making., Strategic-Plans, Strategy/Analysis, time-managment

40 Outstanding Blog Links, Bookmark Carefully!

July 3, 2007 by Liz 31 Comments

Time Management and Research

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What is blog reading and commenting to you? Is it entertainment, interaction, or research for your work? How much time do you spend on the average day reading and commenting on blogs. Think about that before you read further.

I’ll do it too.

Ready? Whatever our answers, we have defined blog reading and commenting to us and quantified how much time we invest in them. Now consider the time we have available in a day. What percent of that time is blog reading and commenting?

Does that leave enough

  • time for our family and friends?
  • time for our work?
  • time for ourselves and for giving away?

If people read as many feeds as they say, I’m guessing it does not. Time is a resource we cannot replace.

Ten Blogs on Blogging

Everyone seems to know Darren’s ProBlogger, our friend from SOBCon Lorelle.Wordpress.com, the “evil” John Chow.com and Successful-Blog here. These are ten others in (no particular order) that offer consistent and quality information about blogging as well.

  1. Bloggingbasics101.com
  2. chrisg.com
  3. BloggingPro
  4. Vaspersthegrate.Blogspot.com
  5. A List Apart
  6. Smartwealthyrich.com
  7. eMomsatHome.com
  8. Alister Cameron, Blogologist
  9. Daily Blog Tips
  10. Buildabetterblog.com

Top Ten Blogs for Writers

For the Top 10 Blogs for Writers Mike Stelzner asked his 20,000 newsletter readers to participate in the nominations. I’ve shortened his definitions of the quality that each blog represents.

  1. Brian Clark’s CopyBlogger: does an amazing job of helping writers improve
  2. Deborah Ng’s Freelance Writing Jobs: for freelance writers seeking new work
  3. Tom Chandler’s Copywriter Underground: regular doses of inspiration and writing tips
  4. Liz Strauss’s Successful-Blog: amazing insights into the craft of writing
  5. Angela Booth’s Writing Blog: something useful for all writers
  6. Kristen King’s InkThinker: improving the written word
  7. Anne Wayman’s The Golden Pencil: gold nuggets of information to freelance writers
  8. Carson Brackney’s Content Done Better: write better copy and make a living (now by Michi Beck)
  9. Dianna Huff’s B2B Marcom Writer Blog: marketing communications copywriting
  10. Allison Winn Scotch’s Ask Allison: For writers looking to break into the publishing world, be sure to check this one out.

Top Ten Blogs on Making Money

The Top Ten Blogs About Making Money in which Shane spends an entire blog post explaining how he came to choose his top ten.

  1. ProBlogger
  2. Shoemoney
  3. Self Made Minds
  4. Entrepreneur’s Journey by Yaro Starak
  5. John Chow.com
  6. Net Business Blog
  7. Bootmoney
  8. Andy Beard
  9. Dosh Dosh
  10. Mike’s Money Making Mission

Top Ten Web Analytics Blogs

This is the April 2007 update ranking from Occam’s Razor by Avinash Kaushik. Be sure to read the post that details how the ranking is done.

  1. Occam’s Razor
  2. Web Metrics Guru
  3. Google Analytics Blog
  4. Web Analytics World
  5. Web Analytics Demystified-Eric T. Peterson’s Analytics Weblog
  6. Increasing your website’s conversion rate
  7. Unofficial Google Analytics Blog
  8. Lies, Damned Lies…
  9. WebAnalytics.be Blog
  10. Web Analysis, Behavioral Targeting and Advertising

I gathered this set with the intention of an offering that would cross blogging cultures. In that way, I’m hoping we all might explore, expnd our tastes, but leave room to let some go early on.

We choose from thousands of books to read and movies to see. Let’s do the same with the blogs that we read. I offer this set of 4 lists of 10 blogs with the hope that we’ll keep the those give us the best return on our investment.

How do you choose the blogs that serve your purpose?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
If you’d like Liz to help you find your strategy, click on the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar. Is Your Business Stuck? I’ve Found a Way to Help

Related
20 Blog Promotion Guides to Inform Your Strategy
Strategy: How to Get Maximum Benefit from Complex Link Lists
The 5-Point Strategy to a Powerful Network
Money Strategy, a Dead Horse, and Folks

Filed Under: Strategy/Analysis, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, decision-making., Strategic-Plans, Strategy/Analysis, time-managment

20 Blog Promotion Guides to Inform Your Strategy

June 27, 2007 by Liz 47 Comments

Strategy

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Strategy, a solid plan that moves to a completed vision, doesn’t come on it’s own. Some folks appear to do it naturally. The part that is natural is that they are big picture thinkers. The part that doesn’t show is that they have done significant work. The two together is what makes it look easy to observers.

Strategy starts with knowing the territory. What Do the Other Guys Do?

20 Blog Promotion Guides

It’s silly to start from stratch to devise the unique promotion strategy for a business or a blog. That’s flying in the dark and re-inventing the wheel at the same time. Other folks do good things that work. It’s only efficient to know what folks who went before us did. Seeing their finished work can inform our choices in these ways.

  • We can see the standard approach.
  • We can imagine our version without producing it.
  • If we look as a customer would, we can see what to avoid.
  • We can notice the exceptions that work and determine whether they might work for us.
  • We can sense the depth, breadth, and repetition of the promotional noise.
  • Everything we see can be mashed into new ideas.

With those benefits in mind, I offer 20 links to review. Later we might choose to take a closer look at one or two of the approaches offered in this sampling.

  1. Mr. Ploppy’s Monday Tool List – Volume XXXIII – Weblog Promotion Tools
    Last January, Mr. Poppy pulled together an organizaed list. It works well to frame research into the promotion playing field.
  2. The Thinking Blog has an outstanding guide to promotion.
    Ilker points out that it’s the posts that count not the blog itself. Ideally, the simple act of blogging in and of itself would attract enough traffic to please the author but there are cases in which more is better.
  3. 21 Ways to Promote Your Startup Business
    This article on starting a business offers 21 venues for promotion, many of which are also useful in promoting a blog.
  4. How to spend $1,000 promoting your established site.
    TDavid has a wealth of information about growint readership, without and without investing cash. Now that the $1,000 is gone, there are still many little things you can do to promote your site that will cost you time, but not necessarily any out of pocket dollars. [via Newsome.org]
  5. SEO Tips: Increase Page Rank By Revitalizing Your Old Posts
    Writing at the Blog Herald, Lorelle explains how to Increase Pank Rank and Ad Vitality and Traffic Interest in Archieved Posts
  6. Best blog promotion techniques
    SEO Blog offers another list of basics perfect for new bloggers.
  7. My blog promotion advice for Ali in Kenya
    David Wallace has developed an acronym that makes the basics easy to remember.
  8. Blog Promotion: What makes sense for you?
    Scot Herrick explains what to consider when choosing the promotional techniques most appropriate for our unique situations.
  9. Offline Blog Promotion Ideas – It’s All About Branding
    blogexposure.com offers a list of ways to get known in our home towns. While online should be where most of your promotion efforts should focus on, do not overlook the opportunity to do some promotions off line. When done correctly, they can be more effective than your online promotions.
  10. Using Video to Promote Your Business
    Zeppelin Media Blog explains the structure of using video to promote a business. Becky McCray from Small Biz Survival gave me the inspiration to extend the conversation she started over at her blog. Be sure to start there! [link follows] . . . Specifically, I wanted to mention some ideas for using video that would help any business or organization.
  11. How to use video to promote your small business
    Any small business could use simple online videos for promotion. Video builds relationships and can be very persuasive. You can make simple videos with just your digital camera and some free software. Need some inspiration for how to use it?
  12. How To Use Community-Driven Blog Promotion For Your Blog
    I Help You Blog suggests that we have our community help us too. Community-driven blog promotion is the term I use for describing any technique a blogger uses to promote his or her blog and that involves getting a blog’s readers to do something that will result in greater exposure for that blog.
  13. 10 Techniques I Used To Go From 0 To 12,000 RSS Subscribers In Seven Months – With No Ads Or Leverage
    Trent Hamm explains how he did just that. I launched The Simple Dollar at the very end of October 2006. I had no pre-existing blog that I could use to drive early traffic, nor did I have any personal contacts that I could use. I also had zero advertising budget. But by June 2007, I had 12,000 RSS readers
  14. Blog Promotion 101
    Tristan from Blogopoly guest posts on problogger with 10 points to review.
  15. Webmaster Forum > Blogging
    John Scott’s Webmaster Forum covers the topic from many angles
  16. Blog Archive Promotion To-Do List
    One from me on how to use your archives to promote your blog.
  17. Promotion, self-promotion and [insert ad here]
    Seth’s take on a variety of free ways to promote a blog.
  18. 42 Methods for Blog Promotion???
    Web Analytics world sets the SEOmoz and Aviva suggestions side by side
  19. 5 Surefire Steps To Increase Readership 300% (or more)
    Ryan Caldwell gets right to it with a focus on increasing readership in ways that count.
  20. 7 Great Ways to Connect with Other Bloggers While You’re Out Reading Blogs
    One of my favorites from my own blog. The title says everything.

This list is a cross-section of what’s out there currently. My goal was to make the list representative of the techniques and strategies suggested at a range of levels. Please feel free to add to the list, if you find something missing.

Know the territory, then decide. It’s the bsst strategy for any plan.

(Wish I understood that before I dated a certain guy in college.)

–ME “Liz” Strauss
If you’d like Liz to help you find your strategy, click on the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

Related
Strategy: 40 Outstanding Blog Links, Bookmark Carefully!
The 5-Point Strategy to a Powerful Network
Money Strategy, a Dead Horse, and Folks
7 Great Ways to Connect to Bloggers While You Are Out Reading Blogs

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Strategy/Analysis, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, decision-making., Strategic-Plans, Strategy/Analysis

Money Strategy, a Dead Horse, and Folks

February 13, 2007 by Liz Leave a Comment

Three Absolutes that Belong Together

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On every performance appraisal form I have worked with, a question has been asked about the use of financial resources. That question was an opportunity to talk about money strategy with my team of employees.

Whether we work in an office, work at home, or don’t work at all, most of us have never been formally taught how to make strategic decisions about money.

My experience is that many folks tend to make one of three global assumptions, and their choice of assumptions becomes their de facto strategy for financial decisions both at work and at home. The three global assumptions are these:

  1. Money is meant to be spent. You have to spend money to make money.
  2. Money is meant to be saved. The more you save, the more you earn.
  3. The best bet is to ask someone else — get advice, or “persmission,” from someone who knows.

All three assumptions are useful — but only when taken together.

Taken individually, the three assumptions above become absolutes without balance. When we rely on only one of three, that assumption often works the opposite from the way a strategy should. We tend to use our chosen one of the three to avoid having to think through a decision. We turn the above assumptions into rationalizations. Each one of the three keeps us tied to the belief that only some people know how to deal with money decisions, and we’re not in that group.

If we look at a decision and at each assumption, we can develop a framework for how to approach money decisions.

Sample Decision: Do I need the latest upgrade for my computer?

Money is meant to be spent.

That’s a nice thought. It’s also a nice way to empty a bank account. Fast adopters tend to favor this assumption.

Money is meant to be spent when it will give us a greater return than not spending it will.

The key here is whether the new upgrade will pay for itself in productivity, quality of life, or other tangible or intangible benefits. In circumstances such as this, here are some of the “go or no go” questions.

  • What benefits will this purchase bring me, my clients, my family? Are these benefits worth more than the purchase price?
  • Will this purchase bring me more time, more productivity, more ability to serve my clients, more efficiency, more quality of life? In other words, can I turn this purchase into money; use it to lighten my workload; or to improve or better balance my life?
  • If I wait to buy this item later, what will I lose while I wait? What opportunity am I giving up by buying this item now?
  • Do I have the cash flow to pay for this? If I’m putting this on charge card or increasing my debt, what is the real cost of what I’m buying when I include the interest and finance charges? — Are the benefits still a good return at that price?

Money is meant to be saved.

Saving money is good. So is spending it wisely. Slow adopters and folks who don’t like change — two different groups — sometimes save when they should spend. A friend of mine calls this “thinking poor.” They are often caught without the right tool for the job. This can mean more work at a lower pay rate.

I repeat, money is meant to be spent when it will give us greater return than not spending it will.

Here are some of the “go or no go” questions for folks whe are biased toward not spending.

  • If I don’t buy this now, what extra work will I be doing? What opportunity to become more efficient will I miss? Is the cash value of the opportunity greater than letting the cash stay in my account?
  • What will it cost to save the money? Would making this purchase be an investment that would gain me more time, more productivity, more ability to serve my clients, more efficiency, more quality work, more quality of life?
  • What will I lose, if I continue to put off purchasing? Am I saving money at a long-term cost?
  • Is my money just sitting in an account, when it could be working for me? If I bought new tools and equipment, would I be more efficient? If I hired part-time help, would I be able to handle more and higher-level work, or spend more time living my life?

The best bet is to ask someone else.

Actually the best advice is to be that someone else.

Money decisions are like other decisions. They require looking at options and possible outcomes. In the end, every money decision comes down to one basic premise.

Money is meant to be spent when it will give us greater return than not spending it will.

I know. I know. This is the place where you say. “Okay, Liz, the horse is dead.”

Sorry, I thought the horse was still twitching.

Truth is, if you can explain how spending money on what you want will deliver a tangible or intangible return that people care about, they will spend their money to invest in what you propose. That’s not selling, that’s helping folks reach their goals.

Solid strategy is simple and makes sense.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
If you think Liz can help with your business, your brand, or your blog, check out the Perfect Virtual Manager on the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

Filed Under: Strategy/Analysis, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Money-decisions, money-strategy, Strategic-Plans

NFL Coaches, CEOs, and VCs Take a Lesson from Your Kids

December 18, 2006 by Liz Leave a Comment

We Learned How Business Works When We Were Five Years Old

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I was re-reading “The E-Myth Revisited” last night. It reminded me of a book I read in 1989, called, “The Game of Work.” Both got me thinking about how the idea of work is so much more important than the task at hand. Those thoughts took me to jobs I had, the work I do, and the games I played as a kid.

I looked around at the world and found that everything that is hugely, remarkably successful has the same things that make it work as our back yard games did.

  • The guy who’s house it is — the place we’re playing — sets the culture. That’s how it’s always been. Everyone takes a cue from the owner, that personality has power. He might keep kids out or share his yard with everyone. He might change the rules in his favor or consistently help others win. Steve Farber, Extreme Leader describes what works remarkably on the playground and in life when he says, I’m convinced that the ultimate rule of the Extreme Leader is to make others greater than yourself.
  • Rules and roles give us freedom to act. — Nothing was worse than when everyone wanted to be king in the drama or sheriff in the old west. Forgive me, but it was chaos when kids would get “shot” and refuse to stay dead. Playing baseball was no fun when we argued about what was a fair ball and was what out or even worse, where the bases were. Learning the rules and working with them make us smarter and give us benchmarks. Seth says so.
  • Sometimes a “do over” is the right answer, sometimes it’s not. — But even the smallest kids know that doing everything over is boring and gets you no where. Guy Kawasaki has some great advice on when and when not to respond to mistakes.
  • Whining, yelling, and tuning out make you look like a baby. — Kids soon enough ignore whiners, yellers, and kids who tune out as not worth the time they take away from the game. Kathy Sierra talks about what to do if stress brings out one of these traits when you should be learning.
  • Don’t break a promise unless someone will get hurt. ,

  • You have to CARE for the game to be remarkable and successful. — Kids know that they put their hearts and their heads into whatever they do Christine Kane explains why everyone wants to do business with people who think like she does.

That’s why experts call play the “work of childhood.” It’s true.

So, let’s get playing.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
If you think Liz can help with a problem you’re having with your business, your brand or your blog, check out the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

Related
Are You a Freelancer or a Solo Entrepreneur? Use Guy Kawasaki’s Mantra as He Meant
5 +1 Whole Brain Steps to Believable Strategic Goals OR Find Your Bliss Without Wasting Time

Filed Under: Business Life, Motivation, Strategy/Analysis, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Business Life, five-year-olds, rules-of-business, Strategic-Plans

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