Posts Tagged ‘Tutorial’

Your Blog Can Earn You Money Part 1 – Introduction

Sunday, July 15th, 2007

Beginning BloggingHow many of you have a secret desire to one day not have to go to an office in a dreary city block, or stand before a bunch of reluctant students and look like you know what you are talking about, or cope with the other crazy drivers as you maneuver your delivery truck through traffic and obstacles looking for a parking space, or drag yourself out of bed before even the birds are up to get the trawler out into the bay or the cows into the milking shed?

Which of you, who having been blogging for a while, reading the wonderful success stories, and envying the amazing page ranks of some of the “pro” bloggers, would also like to have money flowing into your bank account while you sit at home doing what you have already chosen to do because you enjoy it? I know one or two of these pros personally, so I know it can be done.

How can you make this happen for you? Or, more realistically, how can you begin to make this even LOOK like a possibility?

I’m no expert on this, but I have begun, and I am seeing some good results. I’ve been experimenting and trying things that some of the experts write about. Some work for me, some don’t, but all the time I’m learning. And I’m finding that, although it is time consuming, and even hard work, I am enjoying it because it is something I am doing for me!

But I don’t only blog for myself. Some of my blogs are blogs with a message. I believe I have something important to say, and I need ways to get that message read. Perhaps you are in the same situation – part of an organization, church, club, political party, or similar. Perhaps you are a journalist or author who just lives to be read. You might be a poet needing somewhere to wax lyrical. Maybe you are a born teacher or prophet who just has to tell it like it is. Or, perhaps you just have a huge ego and need an audience.

If you are one of these, why would you also want your blog to make money?

Let me tell you a secret. Well, it’s not really a secret, many others know it, but it is an important key. There is an important link between readership and income.

The same techniques that will gain you a readership will also enable your blog to earn money. And if your blog earns you or your organization money, you will be able to afford to do more blogging, and use better tools to do it.

And it isn’t just a case of being able to do both at the same time, and so you may as well do so. No, the truth is that if you do the money earning part well, using appropriate techniques, it can also gain you more traffic. And traffic is what both of these goals need if your blog is to succeed. Success breeds success, and even if you, rightly, don’t equate success only with income, many people do.

Of course, this symbiosis between readership and earnings will not happen if you use inappropriate techniques. For example, we’ve all seen the banner farms where you arrive at a site and are confronted with garish flashing ads, which not only hurt your eyes and offend you with their content, but make it extremely hard to find out what the page is actually about. It still amazes me that even large corporations risk offending their readers with such things. My average stay at such a site is purely determined by how quickly I can get to the next one.

This might be an extreme example, but there are many other counterproductive approaches to traffic building and online marketing. We will look at some of these later in this series.

On the other hand, a well thought out, tastefully designed, appropriately targeted advertisement can actually enhance the content of a page for some readers. You can increase the value the page has for them by providing them with an opportunity to find something they are genuinely looking for. They may leave your page by following the link, which is always a concern, but if they go away in a positive frame of mind, it is likely they will remember your site gratefully and will be back.

If the ads on your site are relevant to your site, and people are clicking on them, and so earning you money, it is clear that your site must also be relevant to those people. This is a useful measure that you are doing something right with your content. If they are not attracted to your site in the first place, and that is entirely driven by the content, then they won’t be there to click on the ads.

You may say, but I can see this just from my page counters. True, you can measure visitors this way, but it does not show you who really engages with your site. But if they do something while they are there, such as post a comment, mention you in their own blog (hopefully with a linkback), send you an email, give you a phone call, fill out a response form, subscribe to your newsletter, buy an e-book, put a link to your site in their blogroll, put your RSS feed in their aggregator, or click on an advertisement, you know that their visit meant something to them. Our aim is to achieve all of these responses, but clicking on an ad is always useful feedback.

Because so many people are interested in earning from their blogs, a large number of useful tools have been constructed to facilitate doing this well and measuring the results. These measurements are just as useful for gauging and fine-tuning the audience your blog reaches. Best of all, most of the tools are free, and we’ll be introducing them as we go along.

As I mentioned above, I am learning a lot from many other bloggers, and along the way in this series I will give you links to some of the best resources and advice that I have found and am finding every day. The blogosphere is dynamic, so nothing stays the same for long. We need to track with these changes. In fact, by being an effective blogger you become an integral part of the changes.

So, as a brief summary, whatever the aim of your blog, it is worth while implementing some kind of earning scheme on your site.

Of course, you can’t do any of this unless you HAVE a blog or other website, so if you don’t have one you might like to first bookmark this page for later reading and then skip over to Your First Blog.Next time we will begin to look at some of the various types of opportunity that are available for you to make money from your blog.

Why Does Anyone Blog?

Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

Beginning BloggingWhy do people blog? People blog for many reasons. If you wish to be seen or heard on the Internet, the easiest way to achieve this is to start a blog.

You might simply want to publicise interesting sites that you find during your web surfing. You think they deserve a wider audience and want a way to point others to them. This is how blogging began – as website logs or weblogs – lists of websites that were worth visiting.

However, there are many other reasons why people blog:

  • You might have a hobby or special interest in a subject. Part of the fascination of a personal interest comes from sharing it with other enthusiasts. You might also want to encourage others who you think might enjoy your hobby to try it. There are thousands of such blogs online. For example, check out my antennablog if you are interested in amateur or ham radio, or a reasonable mystic if you wondered whether someone could be a Christian mystic without losing their sanity.
  • Maybe you are famous, or would like to be famous, and want to tell the world how great you are. Make a blog! Or, you might be a fan of someone famous and love to talk about them with other fans. Think of a famous name, or look one up in Who2.com or Google. I’m sure there will be a fan site about them, if they don’t have their own.
  • You might not be famous, but feel that your own life is worth recording. There are many biographical blogs out there to read. If you are active in online marketing then a biographical page can help you to build your own name as a brand. See MalcolmDow.com as the beginning of my own modest example.
  • Writers and poets use blogs to publish their own works. Blogging is a good way to practice your art, and who knows, you might even catch the eye of a more traditional publisher!
  • Perhaps you have the mind of an information collector. In Australia we call them magpies – others might know them as squirrels – they can’t pass up something bright and shiny. You just never know when it might come in handy! If you have a mass of information about something then why not publish your own personal weblog encyclopaedia? Another possibility is to produce a wiki, the most famous of which is Wikipedia.
  • If you are a member of a society or organisation, such as a school, club, church or service organisation, then a blog is an ideal medium for publicising news and event, the aims of your group, and for communicating with members. I run the Healing Prayer Ministries Network website, blog and Google groups for this purpose. Many pastors are now publishing their thoughts and teaching notes in blogs on their church websites. My Mal’s Meanderings is an example of this.
  • Businesses use blogs to publicise new products and to post customer reviews as part of their strategy to make more sales and provide customer service. This is particularly effective for products such as software or books which can be downloaded, but any business can benefit from a blog. Some blogs are businesses.
  • Blogs are used to disseminate a message that the blogger thinks the world needs to hear. Evangelists, social reformers, lobbyists and politicians are appearing online in ever increasing numbers. especially during times of crisis or when an election is imminent. Critics and conspiracy theorists also abound at such times.
  • Many blogs are used simply as personal (but very public) diaries. people dream, philosophize,fantasize and reminisce online. Others record their travels, or document their home town in a blog, often accompanied by photos and even video clips. Others talk about their kids or pets, or post their family history.
  • Some people with expertise in a subject like to teach. A blog is a great way to present a subject in serial form. (You might be beginning to think that THIS post should be in serial form!) Perhaps you don’t know as much about something as you would like to, but wish to learn. Then why not write a tutorial blog as you discover facts about the subject? In my university lecturing days I was often only a day or two ahead of the students – at least most of them. Tutorial blogs are excellent if you also provide a means by which readers can provide feedback, ask questions, and engage in discussion with you and other readers.
  • Interviews with people make for good blog posts. In fact, any of the traditional approaches to journalism may be considered as the basis for a blog. If you’d like to hone your journalistic skills, then why not take a writing course. My friend Nenia has one you could try at Pen2Print.
  • Blogs are often used to review books, plays, films and websites. Start your own niche review site.
  • And if you are still desperate, don’t go to a ‘Dear Dorothy’ or ‘Ask the Professor’ website for help – start your own. Readers could submit questions which would then be answered in your blog posts.

So, why do you blog? This is a question worth thinking about if you want your blogging to have focus. I was particularly impressed by well known blogger Liz Strauss’ answers when asked why she blogs. I’ll summarise her answers here, but see her blog post for more:

  1. I blog because I said I would. 
  2. I blog because people need a friend.
  3. I blog because I am an entrepreneur in the 21st century.
  4. I blog because I value the wealth of the blogosphere.
  5. I blog because I believe words can change the world. 

Do you know why you blog? Why not post a comment now to tell us about it?

Building a Simple Blogger Blog

Sunday, March 11th, 2007

Beginning BloggingIn the earlier parts of this series we learned what a blog is, then looked at starting your first blog. This time we will actually set up that first blog using Blogger.com.

Blogger, a part of Google, is a free hosted blogging service which lets you post and manage your weblog from within your web browser. It is probably the simplest way to get started in blogging, yet still allows room for moving on to a more sophisticated self-hosted blogging system, as we will describe later.

Blogger provides a choice of a number of templates upon which to build your blog, and these can be edited by someone with a little HTML knowledge to personalise the features to their own liking.

  1. The first step in using Blogger is to set up a Google account, if you don’t already have one. You will already have a Google account if you use one of Google’s other services such as Gmail, Google Groups, Adsense, Google Analytics, etc. Otherwise, go to Blogger homepage, and click the “Create Your Blog Now” button. You will be prompted to create a Google Account, or sign in with your existing account.
  2. Then you choose a display name and accept Blogger’s Terms of Service
  3. Next, you will be taken to your Dashboard, where you will mange your blog. Click on Create a Blog. Enter a title for your blog, and select the address you want as a subdomain of blogspot.com. This will become the URL (Internet address) of your blog - e.g. myblog.blogspot.com.
  4. You are now ready to make your first post. In the Dashboard, under the entry for your blog, you will find + New Post. Click this and you will be taken to the Create New Post page. This is a WYSIWYG (What Yoe See Is What You Get) editor where you can type your post and give it a title.
  5. Once you have typed in your post you can Preview it to see if you are happy with it, or you can Save as Draft if you want to finish it later.
  6. If you are happy with the post then click on Publish Post. This will send the post to your blog to appear on the web. If you now point your browser to the URL of the blog setup in point 4, you will be able to see it. You can also click on View Blog in the Dashboard.

In the Dashboard you can also manage and edit your posts, by clicking on Posts, and change Settings such as the blog’s description, formatting, how comments are handled, who can write to it, and much more. You can also click on Template to change or edit the template which gives your blog its appearance on the web. Don’t be afraid to explore these features. We will discuss them further in future posts.

Quick Tip – Link titles make posts easier to understand

Monday, February 19th, 2007

When writing a post, if you use a term that might not be clear to some readers, make it a link to the appropriate Wikipedia entry.

For example, in a post intended for beginners, Your first blog, I used the term WYSIWYG to describe a feature of some editors.  This term can be linked, as I have done, to the Wikipedia page http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wysiwyg where it is explained as “What You See Is What You Get”.

As an added bonus, this allows you to add a “title” tag to the link so that when the user hovers their mouse over the highlighted term they see your user friendly explanation for the term, even if they don’t take the link, as shown here:

WYSIWYG - What You See Is What You Get

Of course, if you have another post about that term available, then link to that instead of Wikipedia. As a second bonus, the outgoing links and the keywords in the links may also help your search engine rankings.

Your First Blog

Monday, February 19th, 2007

Beginning Blogging

There are a few questions you need to ask yourself when choosing a platform for your first blog:

 * Do I want a free blog, or do I want to pay for it

 * Do I want it hosted on a blog platform, or do I want to host it on my own website with my own domain name?

 * How technically capable am I?

 * Is blogging just a passing interest for me or am I seriously in for the long haul?

Remember, whichever decision you make here can be changed later, but there might be a cost to it.

For example, if you move from a hosted blog to hosting it yourself, be aware that the address (URL) of your blog will change. It will change from something like yourblog.blogspot.com or yourblog.wordpress.com to something like www.yourblog.com. This will mean that if you have developed a loyal readership, with many links to your site from other blogs and directories, RSS feeds, and a good rank in the search engines, all of these will be lost. You will more or less starting all over again.

I can’t answer these questions for you. What I will do is outline my own journey into blogging.

Back in 2002 I became aware of the blogosphere (the universe of all blogs). It wasn’t called that then, but was becoming popular as an easy way to build and use a website. I had constructed a number of free sites, and was just beginning The Roaring Mouse webhosting business. One problem when you build a website for someone else, or even yourself, is that when you want to add or change something you have to edit the HTML or PHP, etc code and then upload the resulting files to the site using FTP. This is a laborious process requiring considerable technical knowledge.

I came across the Blogger.com service, and it seemed an answer to my dreams. I could quickly set up a blog using their templates. They would host it for free, and updates could be easily made using their simple WYSIWYG editor, and instantly published to the site. Anyone could do it. And what’s more, if I wanted I could even host the blog myself on my own domain, but still use their interface to post articles to it.

This is the route I chose. I still use Blogger.com for many of my blogs. It is simple to setup, easy to use, and the templates can be edited to give a degree of individualization to your site. They have just upgraded to a new version which is even better. It has added some features previously lacking, and also allows you to host your blog at Blogger while using your own domain name. Of course, as you browse the web you will see blogs that look far more attractive, and have more features than your own, and you will see mentions of other platforms such as Typepad, MovableType, WordPress, and numerous others.

I’m a skinflint at heart, so I like a bargain - and what could be a better bargain than free? So I decided to have a look at using WordPress.org. While you can host your blog with WordPress itself, at WordPress.com, most WordPress blogs are self hosted. If you have a webhost who provides WordPress installed on their servers, as most do, then you are away. I went to my control panel, to the scripts library, clicked on Install WordPress, and all the files appeared on my site using a default template. It was simple to do, and the result looked quite simple too. But it worked well. From my WordPress blog I could login to my own administration pages and set about customizing my blog. I found that there have been many themes (templates) written by users for WordPress blogs.

I’ve now used a number of these, and customized them to my own liking. There are plugins available that are easily installed and add exciting new features to your blog, such as comment spam eliminators, calendars, blogroll generators, sitemap generators, and so on. I now have a number of WordPress blogs, but still more Blogger.com blogs. A number of these do not have much traffic yet, so I might migrate them to WordPress. There are tools available for such migration. However, several do have a significant readership, so I will probable retain them and keep a foot in both camps. This is not a bad idea, because there are exciting things happening in both communities, and I would like to be able to contribute to the life of both. This is a great strength of the blogging community - the wealth of expertise available and the willingness to share it and help each other out.

Next time we will look at building a blog with Blogger.com, before tackling a WordPress blog.

Further Reading:

Darren Rowse, the well known Problogger, has a good article on choosing a blog platform.

Related Articles:

What is a blog?

 

What is a Blog?

Sunday, February 4th, 2007

Beginning BloggingBlogging is presently the most popular way for people to put content onto a website. To put it simply, a blog, short for weblog, is a website which has a simple interface whereby the owner can place content easily and quickly onto the site. No knowledge of coding or page design, no use of FTP clients or other special file transfer tools is necessary - it is as simple as typing up your content and clicking on a button to publish it to the site. Once posted, as this is called, the content appears virtually immediately.

One reason blogging has become so popular is because free blog hosting services, such as Blogger.com and WordPress.com, are widely available. Blogger is probably the most popular of the hosted services, providing a very simple interface, and a wide range of features for you to personalize your blog. If you have your own domain name and website, Blogger can also publish your posts to your own site. WordPress is similar, but is perhaps even more suitable if you wish to publish to your own site. However, this does require a little more knowledge of website construction.

Other systems are available, such a Typepad, which requires a fee to be paid, and these are also well worth investigating for the features they offer. Most blogs typically contain text, but posts can also consist of graphics, photographs, sound and video. Many video blogs are constructed by linking to videos posted to

YouTube. The posts on a blog are usually organized chronologically, with the date and time of the post displayed, and the most recent post at the top of the page. As the number of posts grows too large to display on the main page of the blog, older posts are archived so that they can always be retrieved later via links called permalinks.

Most blogs have the facility for readers to post their own comments on the things discussed, using a simple interface provided by the blog system. The comments either appear at the end of the post, or are accessible via a link. While sometimes commenting is abused by spammers, and might then be turned off, the ability to comment and provide quick feedback is one important reason why bloggers so easily form communities around a particular topic.

So, what are blogs used for? In fact, a blog can be used to convey any type of information, from descriptions of your latest holiday, complete with snapshots, deep philosophical discussion, opinions you don’t mind airing in public, tutorials about how to do anything at all, to the latest products available from your business.

The blog post you are reading is part of a tutorial blog, The Blog Works. If you go to a reasonable mystic you will see a philosophical blog discussing issues of spirituality. Then, if you go to Mals Meanderings you will find the day-to-day ruminations of a small church pastor.

These are a few examples of my blogs, and on them you will find links to other blogs either I have made, or that I read regularly. These lists are what are called blogrolls, and are a simple, and largely automated way that you can place links to other blogs on your own posts. (more…)

Welcome to The Blog Works

Friday, October 13th, 2006

Welcome to The Blog Works!

The Blog Works is all about building a successful blog. Success is measured in different ways for different people:

You might just want to share your personal thought and discoveries as you journey through life, in which case you want a blog that is quick and easy to use, but which expresses your personality in its appearance. You may or may not be concerned with who or how many see it – it just needs to be there, with your thoughts, photos, music, whatever!

Or, perhaps you have a message that just must be heard. There are many blogs on the web that support some cause, or help to propagate an idea, whether it is political, philosophical or religious. They need as many readers as they can get, and the blog must communicate well and appear professional and convincing.

Maybe your blog is to support a business. Perhaps it is the business! Not only must it clearly display the product, but it must entice the reader to come back time and time again. Traffic is king, as the saying goes.

Then, some blogs are just for fun. They are like the huge laughing mouth at the entrance to St Kilda’s Luna Park – inviting everyone to come in and spend some time relaxing.

Whichever type of blog you wish to build, at The Blog Works we plan to point you at the best tools to acheive it.

  • We’ll look at ready to go free blog hosting systems, as well as how to host a blog on your own domain.
  • We’ll explore ways of enhancing the appearance and functionality of your blog with code templates, code tweaks, widgets, gadgets, adding images, favourite links, blogrolls, etc.
  • A blog is primarily about content. We’ll look at how to write in ways that communicate effectively, and where you might find ideas.
  • A successful blog needs traffic, so we’ll investigate how to get a good position in the search engines, which directories you can submit your blog to, and other communities of bloggers that might be interested in your writing. There are a host of online tools to help you in this.
  • If you are interested in making money through your blog, we will look at the various affiliate and advertising systems that can easily enable this to happen. It is one thing to have ads on a site, but how do you get people to click on them? We’ll look at such things as ad selection, ad relevance, ad design and ad position. And how do you stop your blog from looking like a highway billboard?
  • After all of this is in place you will want to know how your blog is doing, which is where analysis comes in. We’ll look at not only effective ways of measuring how many readers your pages have, but where they come from, what they are doing while they are there, and how they leave.

If you have a suggestion, a comment, or just want to talk about these issues, feel free to post a comment. And, since blogging is all about shared communication, we are happy for you to put your link in a comment, but please make it a comment and a link that is definitely relevant to the post and helpful to other readers. 

While we are talking about sharing, if you have a blog which you think is helpful to other blog developers, post its URL in a comment. If I like it I’ll mention it and put it in a blogroll. This will give you another link to help you gain visitors. A return link on your blog would be appreciated.

We hope you enjoy your use of The Blog Works, and find something of value to help you in your own blogging.