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Archive for the ‘ Blogging Problems ’ Category

dofollow

This morning I was thinking about SEO, google rankings/SERPs and all that jazz. One way to get higher page rankings in google is to have a lot of backlinks. Even better a whole lot of backlinks from sites in related niches. And even better backlinks from high authority sites that have high pagerank.

As a person who uses Google to search for information I like to see top quality sites ranking in the first 10 pages. Sites I can trust, sites that I know the information will be accurate, sites that aren’t misleading.

Bad Tony – A Fictional Tale

Let’s say for example I have just bought a new puppy and I want to teach and train it myself. So I do a search for ‘puppy training from home’ or something like that. I click on the first link that Google gives me and I start reading the site and applying what is said on the site. It must be accurate info right? It’s ranked number 1 on Google!

So I’m training my puppy and nothing is working. I look deeper into the site and find out the page has been created by a 15 year old kid (let’s call him Tony) who has just been regurgitating information from different places all over the web. They themselves aren’t even interested in puppies, have no experience in puppy training at all – they’re just trying to make a quick buck from their site. (or so it seems)

It would seem the way they reached to the top of the Google search rankings was by spamming a lot of forums and blog commenting section that had ‘do-follow’ implemented. This means that Google will follow the links left behind by our fictional friend (or fiend) Tony bumping up his ranking for keyword ‘puppy training from home’.

No-Follow For A Reason

There is a reason Google created the ‘no-follow’ tag. To prevent un-trustworthy sites from ranking. Just imagine if sites like Facebook and Twitter were do-follow. It would be a horrible place to be. A total spam-fest (ok, just imagine the spam you see on those sites now but 100 times worse). SEO gurus would be spamming it left right and centre getting quality backlinks to their site. By implementing no-follow on such sites it prevents people getting any benefit from Google by posting their link up there. Google will just ignore any site with the ‘no-follow’ tag attributed to it.

Is Your Blog Do-Follow? Be Responsible

If you’re a ‘do-follow’ site owner where it’s easy for others to post a link to get some Google credibility I hope that you’re monitoring all links that are left behind. We should be striving to get the best quality/most trusted sources at the top of Google. As site owners, one way to do this is to make sure all the links we have going to external pages are truly quality/trusted resources. It’s our responsibility.

It’s Our Own Fault Really

At the same time however, as consumers we should make sure we are doing background checks on the information we consume, and see what others are saying about the author/owner before we can truly trust what we’re reading will be accurate and quality information that we can apply to our lives. We shouldn’t just jump on the first site we see and take all the information in to be 100% accurate. It’s too easy to create an information site and claim it to be true. So it’s our responsibility as consumers to make sure we do our research too.

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Popularity: 15% [?]

wine-pageForget about trying to make money online, putting in banner ads, google AdSense and what have you and trying to make a quick buck. It’s the wrong way to go about it. Make relationships and build trust. I want to tell you a story I had recently that involved a fine wine shop and a $100 voucher.

Usually I buy my wine from the large liquor warehouse down the road. It’s close and the cheapest so why go anywhere else? The $100 voucher I had however, could only be used at the ‘Fine Wine’ shop which was a lot further away and prices aren’t always the cheapest. But I had no choice in the matter I had $100 voucher to use there so there I went!

Make Yourself Known – Help Out

So I walked into the the small wine shop, there was wine EVERYWHERE. Very well organised. It wasn’t long until someone came up to me and was happy to help if I had any questions. He wasn’t in my face or anything, just a simple ‘can I help you with anything’. I told him that I didn’t know a great deal about wine and was looking for a summery type of red (it’s summer here in Australia). To cut a long story short, he was just really helpful, taught me a few things about wine I didn’t know about, introduced me to rare wines that were very affordable and even took the price down on the grand total as I had amounted to $102 or something like that, so he took it down to $100 neat which my voucher covered. Just a small act like that and the fact that he was really helpful meant so much to me. He now has me as a return visitor in me.

I compare this to the liquor warehouse chains where there is no customer service like we experienced at the small wine shop. It’s like being in a store filled with robot workers. No-one goes out of their way to help, the people at the counters are in a zombie-like state. There just isn’t any personality or engagement. The only reason you go there is because it’s cheap. But buying ‘cheap’ isn’t exactly a nice feeling either.

The Best Part

The best part about this story is where it originated. The wine voucher was a gift from my work mates. The gift came from the relationship that had been built from my time of working there. They knew I was into wine because I’d told them through the many conversations we’d all had in the past. Usually the birthday person would just get a credit voucher that they could use anywhere with no personality behind it. But the fact that they bought me the wine voucher shows that my relationship with my former colleagues had value.

How Can We Apply This To Our Sites

When you get people coming into your site (or wine store) – make them as welcome as possible. Sure enough they’ve probably come from a reliable source (my work mates recommended the Fine Wine shop) for a specific purpose (to buy wine). Make sure your content (wine) is fantastic. Use your expertise to help new readers (customers) as much as possible (wine selection, teaching about various types of wines). Give them more than they will expect (learned about new wines, slashed prices, customer care). Engage with them afterwards (business card).

Deliver care and engagement to your visitors and the people you have just met online. Give them a reason to trust you. I feel so much better now buying wine from the Fine Wine shop than the local liquor warehouse even though the Fine Wine shop is a bit further away and a bit more expensive.

So don’t be too warped worrying about making money through your blog.  Worry about making relationships online and care for people enough that they’ll go out of their way to come back to you. Give them kindness, helpfulness, genuineness, value and trust and you’re in for a great ride.

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Popularity: 4% [?]

adsense

A lot of people recommend if you’re going to have ads on your site, display them on your site from day one. This is so your readers get used to the fact that you have ads on your site. But the problem with this is that how can you really make any money from google AdSense from the start? You’ve got a brand new blog where you’re trying to gain readers trust, yet you’ve got no traffic coming in and you’ve got AdSense running around all over your site.

What is AdSense?

For those that don’t know here is what AdSense is according to wikipedia

“AdSense is an ad serving application run by Google Inc. Website owners can enroll in this program to enable text, image, and video advertisements on their websites. These advertisements are administered by Google and generate revenue on either a per-click or per-impression basis… “

Negative Vibes

The problem with AdSense is that you have no control over what is displayed. The ads are displayed based on the keywords on your page. For example if you have blog post about planting herbs in your garden then ads about herbs will display on that page. That ad that links to a product may not be a product you like, it may be a horrible product – but you have no control over it.

I don’t know about you but I don’t have any positive vibes flowing when I go to a blog that is displaying google AdSense ads. That’s not to say it’s a complete negative, but there aren’t any POSITIVE vibes flowing seeing advertisements on a blog.

Understandably, you probably wouldn’t say no to making some money but if your blog is brand new how can you possibly make anything significant? I had 1500 visits with adsense running and didn’t’ make a cent. So I took it down as I didn’t see any value at all in having adsense ads up anymore.

If you’re in blogging looking to make a quick buck, think again. Blogging takes time. It’s building a reputation for yourself and your blog and that just doesn’t happen overnight. Focus on creating killer content and interacting with your audience and grow your blog/readership network.

A better way to make money from a brand new blog would be to have something like a donate page. Buy me a beer is a popular and fun monetisation strategy for your blog where readers of your blog aren’t intruded by heavy AdSense ads. If people are getting great value from your blog they may feel like being generous and donating some money for the hard work you’ve done when you are expecting nothing in return.

Focus on Content and Communication

Perhaps a better way to go about it would be to NOT have ads from the start, but have great communication with your audience about ads (and anything in general about your blog, your readers are what makes your blog live and breathe).

If you plan to have advertising in the future, communicate this with your readers. If you’re putting out amazing valuable content that your readers just love and have built solid relationships and trust, then I bet they wouldn’t mind you putting up advertising to make some money for your hard work. As long as you communicate this clearly why would they be too upset then? You’ve already built up the relationships, the trust, the readership, the great content for nothing in return.

Do You Run AdSense Ads?

I would love to know what your thoughts are of AdSense ads. Here are a series of questions to think about:

  • Do you run AdSense on your blog? (put a link to your blog in the comments below so we can check it out if you do)
  • Have you made money from it?
  • Is displaying AdSense ads worth it?
  • What are your thoughts when you visit a site with AdSense ads?
  • Have you ever clicked on an AdSense ad?
  • Are you completely numbed by AdSense ads that your eyes just roll over them?

Feel free to add anything else!

Remember – rock on – focus on your content, your readership, build trust and communication. Endorse products you believe in. Don’t let google run the advertising show if you want to go down that avenue.

If you enjoyed this post you may also enjoy:

The Easy Way to Set Up a Blog Using WordPress

How To Submit Your Site to Google

What To Do When Someone Has the Same Blog Name As You

How I Set Up Google Analytics To Track My Blog Stats

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Popularity: 18% [?]

obligated-reciprocate

Stemming from yet another thought provoking blog post by Jordan Cooper he got me thinking about blog commenting and that feeling of being obligated to blog on someone else’s blog if they were to comment on my blog.

Don’t Feel Like You Have To Reciprocate

First of all – I never expect you to come to my site nor comment on my posts when I comment on your blog. Sure, I’d love for you to come over and check my blog out and check out some posts that you like the sound of. But I don’t want you to comment on my posts unless you genuinely want to. If you enjoy giving value, adding to the conversation or really enjoyed my post and want to thank me, then go for it. But NEVER feel like you HAVE to.

I’ll apoligise in advance and want to give warning to everyone that has commented here on this blog. I don’t want to feel obligated to comment your blog posts just because you commented here. I’d say I would visit your blog 9/10 times if you comment here but that doesn’t mean I will automatically comment on your blog.

Strive for Quality Engagement

I value quality engagement on my blog, email, twitter, facebook etc. Don’t we all? There’s way too much noise out there on the internet. You don’t read every blog post in your RSS feed, do you? You don’t read every single tweet on your home feed on twitter, do you?

Just because someone was nice enough to comment on your blog, and even if it was a really great comment, their site may be total crap or something not related to your niche or subject matter that you simply can’t comment on. There’s a wise saying that ‘if you have nothing to say, say nothing’.

If you’re feeling obligated to comment but don’t have something you feel you could really add or want to say – you can always vote (as long as you think it’s worthy of a vote, don’t vote ‘just because’)

So in this case comment if you feel like it. Just let it flow naturally :) Quality is what we should strive for.

Bottom line is that I do not EXPECT you to comment on my blog if I comment on yours nor do I hope you EXPECT me to do the same back. Only do so if it’s WORTHY of a comment/vote. Not – just ’cause

I think reciprocation is a great thing and I do participate in helping others out if they help me too (I like to think I give more than I receive). Definitely! But only if what I’m doing or what you’re doing is of VALUE.

Would love to hear your thoughts on this ;)

This blog post has been in the backburner for some time. I’ve just been reading Chris Brogan’s Trust Agents which sums this post up beautifully.

“Is it wrong to think that what you do for someone will be (eventually) reciprocated? No. Is it wrong to expect it? You betcha.”

If you enjoyed this post you may also enjoy:

How To Deal With An Information Overload and Take Action

How To Keep Yourself Under Pressure and Perform With Your Blog?

OMFG Just Stick To Your Goals!!

Why Being PERFECT Is Hurting You And Your Blog

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Popularity: 10% [?]

information-overload

I want you to answer these questions:

  • What is it you want to DO with your blog in the next 7 days?
  • Do you already have all the resources like ebooks, RSS feeds, reference material online or offline required with the information in them for what you want to DO?

OK, I may be stabbing myself in the foot here and the many hundreds and most likely thousands of bloggers/marketers out there but if you answered YES to my last question then it’s time to shut the door and stop subscribing to blogs, email lists, RSS feeds, ebooks etc that are no longer providing you with VALUE.

If you answered YES to the previous question then you do not need to be aimlessly browsing around the internet and continually reading new RSS feeds if you already have all the information you require at your disposal. Personally I have hundreds of Ebooks that I’m yet to read. As I’m sure many of you have done, you’ve signed up to email lists and continue to get email from them that may no longer add value and which are potentially wasting your time.

Spring Clean

I recommend you stay current with the email lists that you have either formed great relationships with the authors themselves or they are providing great value that isn’t causing a problem with your ‘information overload’. But it’s time to unsubscribe, stop reading pointless emails and take action on the information you have at your disposal.

Will you miss out on valuable information if you do this? Sure maybe, but the reason that unsubscribing and stopping reading all RSS feeds is because you may already have enough information at your disposal.

You may get to a stage where you don’t know what else to do with your blog. You may be stuck in a bit of a rut where you’re not gaining anymore traffic or sales and you seem ’stuck’. THIS is when we should be gathering more information to create new ideas with. Once we have the IDEAS from the INFORMATION we gather from various sources, then it’s time to stop gathering more information and start TAKING ACTION.

Take Action

When I get to a stage where I don’t know what to do with my blog or other online ventures I will go out and read other blogs, sign up to email lists etc to get some inspiration and get more ideas. But right now it’s time to TAKE ACTION on all the information I ALREADY have at my disposal. And you should do the same. Achieve your goals and stop wasting time with all this information overload.

Again – It’s time to take action on all the information you ALREADY have at your disposal.

I’ll leave you with these final questions:

How many hours this week did you put towards working on your blog this week?

Out of that time you put towards working on your blog, how many hours this week did you REALLY spend on tasks for your blog and actually getting stuff done?

Maybe it’s time to do a bit of a spring clean (perfect time of the year, right?) and remove some of that information overload.

How do you deal with the information overload that is the internet?

If you enjoyed this post you may also enjoy:

How To Keep Yourself Under Pressure and Perform With Your Blog?

OMFG Just Stick To Your Goals!!

Why Being PERFECT Is Hurting You And Your Blog

Popularity: 15% [?]

analytics-filter

Want better quality Google Analytics data? With analytics filters (or Advanced Segments they call them) you can add filters enhance the way you view data.

Personally – I view my site a lot to make sure it’s working, to check comments and generally just to make sure everything is running smoothly. When I view my analytics data – especially since I don’t get thousands of visits a day (yet ;) )- the visits I personally make on my site can make a big difference on how I analyse the data.

Now some of you may say – well that’s easy – just create a filter to remove your IP address. Unfortunately a lot of computers these days have a dynamic IP address meaning every time you log onto the internet you will have a different IP address than you had before. So it’s not as simple as removing yourself based on IP address.

My solution is to create an analytics filter to get rid of my CITY. The only problem with this solution is that I will be removing potential real visits from my home town that I won’t be able to track if I use this filter. (Also keep in mind you can change between a filter that you’ve created and go back to the default with a click of a button, so you don’t lose anything by applying these filters)

Another problem may be that you’re getting a lot of visitors coming to your site that don’t even visit your site for 1 whole second! I’ve created an analytics filter for that as well.

Below are the two filters I use – Removing my home town/city of Brisbane, Australia and only showing visits when they’re at the site for more than 0 seconds. I’ve also added in how to combine the two.

Analytics Filter – Remove Home Town/City

1. Log into Google Analytics

advanced segments

2. Click to Advanced Segments and click on + Create new custom segment
3. Under Dimensions (in green) click visitors to show a drop down menu

dimensions-city

4. Drag City into the dotted box where it says ‘dimension or metric’
5. On the Conditions drop down box select ‘Does not match exactly’ This is a very important step and can sometimes be missed. You want to see the results where people DO NOT come from your home town (i.e. yourself).

analytics-filter-city

6. Type in the name of your city. In my case it is ‘Brisbane’.
7. Name your segment. I’ve named mine ‘Visits not from Brisbane’
8. Click the Create Segment button. That’s it you’re done!

You can now go back to your dashboard and in the top right position there is a drop down menu All Visits. Under the drop down you should find your newly created advanced segment. Click on this, then apply to see how many visitors you get excluding the ones from your city.

analytics-filter-view

Simple, right! :)

Now I’ll show you how to only display quality visits when users are on your site for longer than 0 seconds.

Analytics Filter – User On Site More Than 0 Seconds

1. Log into Google Analytics
2. Click to Advanced Segments and click on + Create new custom segment
3. Under Metrics (in blue) click Site Usage to show a drop down menu

analytics-filter-time
4. Drag Time on Page into the dotted box where it says ‘dimension or metric’
5. On the Conditions drop down box select ‘Greater than’ This should already be the default option.
6. Type in 0 as the Value

analytics-filter-time-create
7. Name your segment. I’ve named mine ‘Time on site greater than 0′
8. Click the Create Segment button. That’s it you’re done!

To see if it worked properly – go back to your dashboard once again and in the top right position there is a drop down menu All Visits. Under the drop down you should find your newly created advanced segment. Click on this, then apply to see how many visitors you get excluding which are staying on your site for longer than 0 seconds.

Analytics Filter – Combine the two filters into one

add-second-analytics-filter

1. Follow the steps above, when you get to adding the second condition click the Add “and” statement link and repeat the steps for Analytics Filter – User On Site More Than 0 Seconds in the new slot (or the Analytics Filter – Remove Home Town/City depending on which one you already have up)
2. Name your segment and click Create Segment. That’s it – you’ve just combined 2 basic filters into one more complex filter!

By placing this analytics filter I feel there is a much more accurate measure of what your users are doing on your site. You can guarantee all your own visits won’t be counted and you’ll actually get tracking data based on users that are actually using your site.

There could be many reasons why Google Analytics shows visits at 0 seconds. I’m not 100% sure but they could be search engine spiders crawling your site or bots of some other sort. Perhaps people are visiting your site when they didn’t mean to and close it before the Google Analytics code could load properly. What do you think?

I hope you’ve found this helpful and I hope you apply these analytic filters to your site to get a better measure of what your users are up to.

Edit:
Turns out you can actually share filters! Let me know if these work for you (you will have to change your city to wherever you live)

No visits from x city

Time on site greater than 0 seconds

No visits from x city and time on site greater than 0 seconds

I would urge you to try out your own filters so you’re at least getting your hands dirty a little bit. Don’t under estimate having experience! I would love to see what handy filters you have come up with. If you do – let us know in the comments below!

If you enjoyed this post you may also enjoy:

How I Set Up Google Analytics To Track My Blog Stats

How to Submit Your Site to Google

The Easy Way To Set Up a Blog Using WordPress

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Popularity: 4% [?]

art-juggling-work-blog

This is a guest blog post by Nicholas Cardot from Site Sketch 101 Having just resigned from full-time work myself I understand that running a successful blog while working full-time can be hard work. Nick shares his experiences…

Blogging can be a difficult task.  In fact, those who tell you that you can compete with the top bloggers in the blogosphere without having to work very hard are sadly mistaken.  It takes hard work.  It takes a lot of writing.  It takes dedication to provide amazing content to your readers in every article.

And truth be told, most people aren’t full-time bloggers.  We don’t all have the luxury of enjoying a full-time income from our blogging efforts.  We have to work and sometimes that means long hours.

I currently serve as an Infantryman in the United States Army.  I work an average of 60 or more hours every week and I maintain an amazing blog (in my opinion) called Site Sketch 101.  It’s not always easy to balance them both, but it’s fun and it can be done.

Let me share with you some of the things that I do to help me write, design, interact and work a job.

1.  Always carry a pen and paper with you.

You never know where you’re going to be when you think of any idea that you can use as the topic of an article and with your time limited you can’t afford to forget it.  If you think of an idea, write it down right away.

2. Schedule time to work on your blog.

I don’t usually sleep in very late on Saturday morning.  I get up, get a glass of milk, and I get to work writing my articles for the coming work.  I use the ideas that I came up with throughout the week and I put them into articles.

3.  Don’t get overwhelmed.

If you feel like you’re too stressed out then take a break.  I blog because it’s a way for me to relax.  I enjoy it.  I love interacting with my readers.  I love helping people grow and develop their skills.  I love writing and expressing myself.  I have fun doing it.  Find a way to make it fun.  Enjoy what you do.  And when necessary, take breaks.

It is possible to operate an amazing blog and work a full-time job.  Don’t think that your limited by your situation.  You’re not.  You can accomplish amazing things.

But don’t stop learning and growing.  Those of us who work full-time have a major disadvantage.  We have less time to learn and develop ourselves as bloggers than those without jobs.  But that is no excuse.  Let’s continually strive to be the best that we can be.

Nick uses his blog Site Sketch 101 to express his passion for helping people learn how to blog with awesome content, brilliant designs and commanding influence.

If you enjoyed this blog post you may also enjoy:

How To Keep Yourself Under Pressure and Perform With Your Blog?

OMFG Just Stick To Your Goals!!

Why Being PERFECT Is Hurting You And Your Blog

Popularity: 7% [?]

under-pressure

I resigned from full-time employment last week. The desire to work on some personal projects (this site is one of them) create a better lifestyle for myself and to continue my studies and practice in blogging, online marketing and social media outweighed being employed full-time any longer.

Blogs are a solo venture most of the time and with all this time and freedom now within my hands it can sometimes be hard to keep myself under pressure and get things done 100% of the time like most jobs where you work under someone barking instructions at you.

So the question begs – How do you keep yourself under pressure and perform with your blog?

In the corporate 9-5 world there was always pressure applied. It wasn’t intense, but it was there. You have to show up on time and you couldn’t just not do any work. If you did poorly or under-performed based on your expectations you would run the risk of being warned or potentially being fired.

This doesn’t happen when you run a blog. You rule, you’re the boss. So how do you keep yourself under pressure and motivated so you get that feeling of ‘this must get done’?

Here are my top ways of keeping myself under pressure and performing:

1. Setting myself goals

Every month I set myself end of month goals. This lays out a clear plan of exactly what needs to get done for the month. No second guessing, it’s there black and white – I just have to DO it!

2. The fear of being a sloth

I can remember when I was studying at university a few years ago – as soon as holidays came around I would pretty much hibernate till uni started again. Maybe it was a lack of interests or I was partying too much but I never really did anything constructive during the breaks.

I can’t afford to do that now – I’ve given myself a year to make something happen since leaving my job and give myself the lifestyle I desire. If I don’t do ANYTHING during this time I will have just wasted a whole year and have a massive gap in my resume with nothing to prove when, and if, I need to go back in search for another corporate 9-5 job ‘working for the man’.

My body is still in 9-5 mode so I’m still getting up at 6.30am automatically, even without my alarm. I’ve decided I’m going to keep getting up early and not sleep in just because I don’t HAVE to be anywhere. That’s not entirely true though – I have many things I want to get done and sleeping in and wasting the day away isn’t going to help. As soon as I get 7-8 hours sleep I get up and start my working day!

3. Proving to others I can do this

Maybe it’s a bad trait of mine, but I like proving others wrong when they doubt me. It’s improving but I don’t think many people, especially the older folk (my parents for example) really understand blogging, its potential and power it currently has and will have in the future. It’s already proven that blogs make the best websites in terms of SEO and rank higher in google than say a company website.

Not only that, blogs are being referred to as ‘new media’ where TV, newspapers etc are being referred to as ‘old media’ and blogs will be the main place where everyone will get their news (linking from social media resources like facebook and twitter).

In my situation it’s also hard to let others know what I’m doing. I usually just say ‘online marketing’ just to simplify things but even that gets funny looks. Maybe I should say ‘I’m becoming a teacher and writer’ might sound more impressive. :)

It doesn’t bother me what others THINK of me, but I look forward to be able to show others what I have done with my time when they have been thinking I’m doing nothing and have been ‘chilling out’. Which isn’t the case at all ;)

4. Not letting readers down

I’ve got a following now, people actually visit my blog and some wonder what’s going on when I haven’t posted for a while. I don’t want to let these people down by not posting for a long period of time. I want to help others, not let them down so this is a big driving force for me.

5. I need to eat

I’ve left work in search for a better lifestyle and to pursue a career online. If I don’t work at it, and work HARD in order to make a bit of money to get by – I won’t be able eat and I will have to go back in search for another full time job which right now I really don’t want to do. I left work to pursue a lifestyle change and an online career and that’s what I’m going to do. No-one is going to stop me!

——————————

I realise a lot of my motivation factors have to do with my current situation of being unemployed now – however, blogging is still a solo mission where you work for yourself. You need to motivate and sometimes get yourself under pressure in order to perform.

So how do you keep yourself under pressure in the blogging world to make sure you get things done?

Are you currently working ‘for the man’?

How much time do you get to spend on your blog?

Write them in the comments below – I would love to know and I’m sure others would too :)

If you enjoyed this post you may also enjoy:

OMFG Just Stick To Your Goals!!

Why Being PERFECT Is Hurting You And Your Blog

Batching for Bloggers

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Popularity: 22% [?]

stick-to-your-goals

Seriously!

It is way too easy to get sidetracked on the internet these days. I’m writing this in the heat of the moment with a bit of passion because I just wasted an hour not achieving my goals. It’s not often I get quite a bit of time to myself so I want to share with you what just happened in as much detail as I can…

Ok so I’ve got a WHOLE Sunday to myself. I had just written out a to do list on a piece of pen and paper, these are my GOALS for today in priority order – heck I’ll even take a picture of it – you’ll notice that none of them are checked off yet and (as I write this) it’s 2:09PM here on a Sunday afternoon.

blog-to-do-list

Ok so what happened: I went into google reader because I know there was a blog post by Darren Rowse that I had starred about backing up your blog (my no1 task on my list). This is something I haven’t done yet for my blog so I think it’s time I started backing my database up otherwise I will probably be a bit upset if I lost it all.

Of course I go into google reader and I find 80+ unread blog posts there just wanting to be read. Instead of going up to search box in my starred items and typing in ‘wordpress backup’ or words to that effect to find the article I’m after, I started going through all my unread items, which led to going to blog posts, which led to clicking off links to other blog posts or websites and so on and so on. I did this for a whole hour!

The internet is called the web for a reason – everything is connected by links in the form of a web (metaphor). You could go to endless websites without even touching your keyboard and just keep clicking on links all day.

Writing this blog post was NOT on my list for today either but it’s on my goals list for the month so I thought I’d kill two birds with one stone. Vent and achieve a goal! :) But I’m still upset that I’ve wasted this hour. I really want to achieve my goals.

So please do me a favour – stick to your goals!  I feel if I can avoid the distraction, that is – don’t do anything unless they’re contributing to completing my goals – I feel I can get everything on my list done today.

When is the last time you actually got everything on your to-do list done? I honestly can’t remember. Maybe I make my lists too big?

I’m getting my list done today if it kills me. No more distractions! Email, Twitter, Google Reader, Facebook – all turned OFF!

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Here are some more motivating posts for you, don’t read them though – finish your to-do list now!

Why Being PERFECT Is Hurting You And Your Blog

How I Got 1000 TARGETED Twitter Followers In 30 Days

Batching for Bloggers

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I have been seeing and receiving a lot of messages lately from people saying they really want to blog. Which is fantastic, but why haven’t they started their blog yet I wonder? I believe they are suffering from perfectionism. They are preventing from starting a blog because they want it to be absolutely perfect. Don’t get me wrong, I am guilty of this too and I am starting to realise now that no-one or no blog is ‘perfect’ by definition.

Definition of ‘Perfect’

Dictionary.com definition of Perfect
conforming absolutely to the description or definition of an ideal type.

Everyone has different ‘definitions’ of what a blogger/successful blogger is, so it’s impossible to create a ‘perfect’ blog. YOU should be the only person that really defines what blogging is and what it means to you.

For those people that want to blog but haven’t yet – instead of saying ‘I want my blog to be PERFECT’ say ‘I want my blog to be LIVE TODAY‘. The difference? Being perfect isn’t taking any action that can be evaluated by your readers – which is the most important aspect of your blog. If you didn’t want anyone to read your blog you should be writing in your own personal diary offline or privately online so no-one else can read it.

Make mistakes – it’s a GOOD thing

You won’t learn anything and you won’t grow as a blogger if you try and build a perfect blog from the get-go. The only thing you will learn is that you’ve wasted an opportunity take your blog live weeks/months/years ago and you could have built a really successful blog by now. I say years because I had the idea of beginnerblogger.com over 2 years ago but never took action. I myself was suffering from perfectionism. I can just imagine if I had have started my blog 2 years ago how successful it could have been now.

Blogging is extremely affordable, so affordable that it’s actually free. So what’s stopping you? You will learn more from your mistakes and grow over time if you take action now than waiting around and trying to perfect your idea. If you sit back trying to perfect everything, plan everything out then launch your blog and it doesn’t go to your perfect plan. What happens then? Oh dear, your perfect blog wasn’t perfect after all was it?

The point I’m trying to make is that no blog is ‘perfect’. There are blogs out there that are very successful in what they do, but they’re certainly not ‘perfect’. There will be areas in everyones blog that needs work. That’s all part of the fun process of blogging – finding out what you can do to improve your blog so it is growing the way you and your readers like.

Take Action TODAY

If you take just one thing out of this post it is to Take action on your blog TODAY don’t wait until tomorrow, it will be too late. Planning for a perfect blog will hurt you in the long run. So press that big red button and take action NOW!

If you enjoyed this post you may also enjoy the following:

1. The Easy Way to Set Up a Blog Using WordPress (should have a blog set up for FREE in 10minutes)
2. Blog Progress – Volume 1 (things I did in my first month of blogging)
3. How to Submit Your Site to Google
4. Pilot Post (my first blog post!)

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