
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
The Evolution Of Spam: A Timeline Of The World's Most Hated Messages

Monday, April 11, 2011
Why Nobody Cares About Your Content (And What to do About It)

- Discover How This Very Blog Gained over 10,000 Subscribers In Just 12 Months
- Discover How You Can Grow Your Blog to Over 10,000 Subscribers in Just 12 Months
© Copyright 2006-2011. Copyblogger Media LLC. All rights reserved.
Friday, April 8, 2011
The Quora Quotient
Monday, April 4, 2011
7 Must-Haves For Successful Business Blogs
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I’ve learned a lot during my seven years of blogging. Online Marketing Blog has received a lot of praise recently, but more important, my experience with reviewing others’ blogs has been a learning experience. I’ve looked at more than 1,000 blogs to create the BIGLIST and recently reviewed the top UK online marketing blogs, as well.
Here are a few key characteristics that represent a highly productive blog in terms of branding, community, SEO, PR, recruiting and taking mindshare away from the competition:
1. URL. Pick something short and easy to remember. Blog.domainname.com works well, as does domainname.com/blog or companynamblog.com. Try to avoid obscure or long URLs like www.domainname.com/files/about/blog?home or worse, companyname.blogspot.com. If you’re representing a business, act professionally and use a domain name you control for your blog URL.
2. Blog name. If your blog has a unique name like “GM Fastlane,” then it should have a prominent logo that links to the blog’s homepage. If your blog is named “Company Name Blog” that’s fine, but offer a “home” to go to. Taglines to go along with the blog name are useful for readers so they understand what your blog is about. Taglines are also useful for search engine optimization.
3. Design. Make sure your brand’s style carries over to your blog’s design. Keep in mind that the design shouldn’t confuse readers by being too similar to that of your company’s website. Here are a few key points to keep in mind:
- Stand out. There are millions of blogs, not to mention social channels like Twitter and Facebook. You’d better stand out, or you’ll be forgotten.
- Add style. Make an effort to convey the personality and style of your company.
- Easy to read. Headlines should be larger than the body copy. Blog author, date published and other elements like comment count are useful for readers to connect with post authors. The date indicates they’re reading fresh content. We remove dates after a year or so.
- Header. Most bloggers express their creativity with header graphics or images. If you can’t have a unique logo for your blog, have a unique header.
5. Content. Create an editorial plan for the blog. After seven years of blogging, I like to have certain days each week planned out with specific topics and keep other days as wildcards. For example: Social Mondays, tactical tips on Tuesdays, Thursday rants, and Friday news roundup. Pay attention to Web analytics, off-site citations, comments and social chatter to gauge whether your content resonates.
6. Social. Your blog might have Twitter, Facebook, Slideshare, YouTube, Amplify or similar accounts. Use them to extend the conversation, repurpose or mash up blog content. I’ve added the Facebook fan box to my blog’s sidebar and made posts easy to share on Twitter and Facebook with buttons/counters at the top of each post. It’s no wonder that Facebook and Twitter drive a substantial amount of blog traffic. That’s not because I offer the sharing buttons as much as the fact that we’re social on Facebook and Twitter. Flair is no substitute for interaction. If you add social features to your blog, understand that to make them effective, you must also spend time on those social channels.
7. Who. Who is behind the blog? This is far too rare a feature on many blogs. Create a page that describes the purpose of the blog and the people behind it. That makes it clear what readers can expect and gives them something to identify with when reading posts. There are many other tips for effective blogs. Essentially, make sure your blog conveys the brand and message you’re after with its design and content. Make it easy to read, navigate and share content. Within a few seconds, readers should be able to tell what the blog topic is and find something interesting. If not, they’ll move on to someone else.
Monday, March 28, 2011
Are You Making Something?
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Making something is work. Let's define work, for a moment, as something you create that has a lasting value in the market.
Twenty years ago, my friend Jill discovered Tetris. Unfortunately, she was working on her Ph.D. thesis at the time. On any given day the attention she spent on the game felt right to her. It was a choice, and she made it. It was more fun to move blocks than it was to write her thesis. Day by day this adds up... she wasted so much time that she had to stay in school and pay for another six months to finish her doctorate.
Two weeks ago, I took a five-hour plane ride. That's enough time for me to get a huge amount of productive writing done. Instead, I turned on the wifi connection and accomplished precisely no new measurable work between New York and Los Angeles.
More and more, we're finding it easy to get engaged with activities that feel like work, but aren't. I can appear just as engaged (and probably enjoy some of the same endorphins) when I beat someone in Words With Friends as I do when I'm writing the chapter for a new book. The challenge is that the pleasure from winning a game fades fast, but writing a book contributes to readers (and to me) for years to come.
One reason for this confusion is that we're often using precisely the same device to do our work as we are to distract ourselves from our work. The distractions come along with the productivity. The boss (and even our honest selves) would probably freak out if we took hours of ping pong breaks while at the office, but spending the same amount of time engaged with others online is easier to rationalize. Hence this proposal:
The Two-Device Solution
Simple but bold: Only use your computer for work. Real work. The work of making something.
Have a second device, perhaps an iPad, and use it for games, web commenting, online shopping, networking... anything that doesn't directly create valued output (no need to have an argument here about which is which, which is work and which is not... draw a line, any line, and separate the two of them. If you don't like the results from that line, draw a new line).
Now, when you pick up the iPad, you can say to yourself, "break time." And if you find yourself taking a lot of that break time, you've just learned something important. Go, make something. We need it!
Copyright © 2011 Seth Godin. All Rights Reserved.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Professional Networking Site LinkedIn Hits 100 Million Member Milestone, Preps For IPO
Interestingly enough, more than 50% of the company's members come from outside the United States, with one-quarter alone based in Europe (20+ million) and the United Kingdom (5+ million). Nearly 10%, or just over 9 million, are in India. Overall, LinkedIn has members in over 200 countries and territories.
The diversity and accelerated growth in membership are impressive, and certainly represent attractive qualities as the company races toward its highly-anticipated initial public offering (IPO) in 2012. Another big sign of growth? LinkedIn started off 2011 with nearly 1,000 full-time employees located all around the globe, up from around 500 at the beginning of 2010.
To commemorate the membership milestone, LinkedIn produced the following infographic which details interesting membership figures and demographics. Check it out by clicking on the image for a larger view:
Keep your eye on LinkedIn over the next 12 months as it prepares to go public. The company has been introducing features and services left and right for companies and individual professionals, and it promises even more to come. And as Facebook continues to focus more on consumers than businesses, LinkedIn may become the de facto social media outlet for companies of all sizes.