Tag Archive: blog

Worried about blogging? Start slowly with WordPress.com

Fairy Blog Mother: blogging help

Fairy Blog Mother

I regularly read blogs that praise WordPress and say what a fantastic blogging platform it is. But generally it is WordPress.org they are talking about, the sophisticated version that is independently hosted, and can perform in total synchrony with your website, or even become your whole website!

refers to .com blog

Unfortunately you need to pay to host it, it needs someone who understands how to build it and it can take a long time to set up. Even so, once completed, the results are totally professional, it collaborates extremely successfully with search engines, and is very much worthwhile the expenditure.

But this doesn’t help the blogging sceptics. There are plenty out there that are uncomfortable about starting a blog, are not sure of the expense, their business may have only have a budget, or they would like to find out more about WordPress before making a commitment.

Enter WordPress.com, the ‘free’ version hosted by WordPress that can be set up in minutes. Its minimal expenses are to activate Akismet, the ‘spam eater’, and if you want to convert the URL WordPress gives you to one of your own.

Here is a blogging platform ideally suited to enable you to ‘practice’ blogging before embarking into this social networking world. By creating a WordPress.com blog you will be able to learn how to fully use the platform, discover all the tricks there are available, excel in the intricacies of blogging and enjoy producing a fully-operational blog with the minimum of fuss.

OK, there are some restrictions: you can’t advertise or sell from a WordPress.com blog, as the blog police will close you down. Only certain forms of HTML code are accepted (RSS, YouTube videos, podcasts, etc) so it is not a medium to make money. This kind of blog should be used only to education, entertain and publicise your business.

But if you want to create a blog to practice blogging or somewhere to dip your toe into the blogging world before expanding into more elaborate and profitable realms, then WordPress.com is the answer.

And remember, if you want to eventually create a WordPress.org blog in the future, it is extremely easy to transfer the contents of your WordPress.com blog over to it without losing a thing! After all, they are run by the same people!

If you want to know how to set up a WordPress.com blog, my visual e-courses are available free on this website. Just click here to make a blog or explore the links on my sidebar.

Jargon-free SEO for beginning bloggers


(A guest blog by Tom Pick, author of that blog’s design I improved recently)

When you first launch your blog, most of the visits you get are likely to be from your direct efforts — telling people you know about your blog, linking to your posts on Twitter, getting like-minded online or offline acquaintances to recommend it, etc.

Over time, however, most blogs drive the majority of their traffic through search engines. Getting traffic from search requires that your blog rank well (show up highly — preferably in the first few results) in search engines, and getting a high ranking for a specific search phrase requires that you do a bit of search engine optimisation (SEO) on your blog.

SEO is not magic, ‘secret’ or even all that complicated. You may hear some SEO ‘experts’ throw around terms like canonicalisation, long tail, 301 redirects, cloaking, or latent semantic indexing. While these terms have some real meaning, particularly for large, complex websites competing to rank on commonly used and therefore highly competitive search terms, they are all SEO jargon. Too often they are used not to convey meaning, but rather to make the person using them feel smart, and to make you feel stupid. Don’t fall for it; making your blog search engine-friendly isn’t terribly difficult and you can do it without having to learn a whole new language.

Here are six tips to help you get your blog to rank well in search and draw visitors who are interested in what you have to say:

1. Think about your keywords. ‘Keywords’ is actually a somewhat misleading SEO jargon term; ‘key phrases’ would be more accurate. These are phrases, usually 3-4 words, that communicate to your readers (and to the search engines) what your blog, and what each post, is about.

First off, your blog needs one high-level phrase that describes the subject you’ll be writing about on a regular basis. Then each post you write needs to focus around one or two key phrases or ideas in the post. For example, this post may rank well for the phrases ‘jargon-free SEO’ and ‘SEO for beginning bloggers’. That’s the core topic of this post, and used in the title to communicate that both to people and search engines.

2. Use keywords in your blog name and post titles. The high-level phrase that describes your general topic, as noted above, should be used in your blog name. For example, if you are writing about natural and organic foods, or the best pubs in London, don’t call your blog ‘Fred’s Blog’ or ‘Mary’s Thoughts’. Make it something like ‘Natural and Organic Food with Mary’ or ‘London’s Best Pubs by Fred’. Over time, your blog should rank well for your title phrase (as long it isn’t too common or generic).

My blog is called the Webbiquity B2B Marketing Blog. Webbiquity is a made-up word (meaning “to be findable in many places online”), so no one is likely to search for that unless they’ve actually heard of my blog. But B2B (short for business-to-business) marketing blog is a common search phrase. At last check, my blog appeared on the lower half of the first page for this term; not bad for a fairly new blog with a lot of competition (and actually my old blog, WebMarketCentral, still ranks for this term as well even though my last post there was in January 2010).

Similarly, each post should you write should contain one or two key ideas, phrases that are used in the title, content, and meta tags (oops, more SEO jargon—I’ll explain meta tags shortly).

3. Write interesting content. This is really the single most important thing you can do for SEO. Interesting content naturally includes key phrases that are important to your topic. It also attracts links from other bloggers and will result in people recommending your content through social bookmarking sites like Digg and StumbleUpon as well as through social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter.

4. Use keywords in meta tags. Meta tags are simply bits of content that describe your blog and each post on it, more for the benefit of search engines than human visitors. Think of meta tags like the dust jacket of a book. When you look at the front and back covers of a book, you can immediately glean key information such as the title, author, perhaps a short description of the contents, and recommendations from reviewers. These enable you to get a pretty good idea of what the book is about without even opening it. Meta tags serve the same function for search engines; they communicate, briefly, what each page or post on your blog is about.

Most blog platforms provide a way for you to easily edit your meta tags. In WordPress for example, it’s best to install a plugin called the All in One SEO Pack. With this plugin installed, simply scroll to the bottom of any page or post in the WordPress editor and you can add three bits of meta tag content: title, description and keywords.

The title tag is the most important element for search engines. It can be the same as, or slightly different from, the actual title of your post. But it should be no more than 80 total characters and include the most important key phrase for your post right at the beginning.

The description is a short summary (generally 150-200 characters) designed to hook search engine users into reading your posts. For example, a meta description for this post might be:

Learn how to get your blog to rank well in the search engines using this simple, jargon-free guide to SEO for beginning bloggers.

Note that it’s short, action-oriented (‘learn how’) and describes the benefit readers will get from this post (rank well in search).

The meta keywords tag is the least important for search; Google no longer uses this, though some of the lesser-known search engines do. Still, this can he helpful in clarifying your thoughts, and it doesn’t hurt to include 2-4 keyword phrases, separated by commas, in this tag.

5. Get links to your blog. The two core elements of SEO are content and links. Content tells the search engines what your blog is about; links tell them how much popularity or authority your blog has.

There are many ways to get links, but the best is by writing interesting content that others want to link to. For example, if Fred (from the example above) wrote a post about ‘The Ten Best Pubs in London’ and included brief reviews of each, it’s highly likely that others interested in the London social scene (such as bloggers and even journalists) would link to it.

Social bookmarking and networking sites are another source for links, though it’s not clear exactly how much weight these carry with the search engines (and their engineers won’t tell). These links appear to only have a real impact on search if many people are linking to particular post or blog.

A great way to jumpstart links to a new blog is by submitting it to blog directories, sites dedicated to categorizing and linking to blogs of all types.

6. Have patience. Unless you are writing about a very obscure topic with low search competition, a new blog is unlikely to rank highly in the major search engines. It generally takes a fair amount of content (at least a couple of dozen posts), links and time before search engines, particularly Google, really start paying attention to a blog.

However, by focusing on writing compelling content, and following the steps above, your blog will inevitably rise in the search engine ranks and attract more readers interested in your writing.

About the author: Tom Pick is an online marketing executive with KC Associates, a marketing and PR firm in Minneapolis, Minnesota, focused on B2B technology clients. He’s also the award-winning writer of the Webbiquity blog, which focuses on B2B lead generation and Web presence optimization – the fusion of SEO, search marketing, social media, content marketing and interactive PR.

Would Victorians understand blogging?

Fairy Blog Mother

Blogging is definitely a 21st century phenomenon. So why am I thinking of it in 19th century terms?

Quite some time ago I posted a question on LinkedIn asking how would a Victorian gentleman view blogging. The responses were as varied as they were interesting, some even replying as if they were Victorian gentlemen themselves! Apart from the florid language and lengthy time taken to describe things, it was a good insight to break down blogging into its most basic format, to view it without all the bells and whistles that adorn this platform that could also confuse the true reason why to blog.

The internet was viewed as the telegraph, and therefore a blog is somewhere to publish your news through the telegraph system to reach a much wider gathering than through letter alone. Of course, sending a letter to The Times would certainly reach many readers, and the Victorians were compulsive letter writers (as well as reading them), but a blog could resemble an inclusive Gentleman’s Club through which you could submit your thoughts and musings, ideas and innovations, gripes and grumbles, retorts and responses, to both a private and public audience.

This opportunity to broadcast yourself as a source of authority, where readers will take your opinions as fact, would be much less expensive than writing and printing a series of pamphlets. These might be in danger of not reaching their intended audience, be wasted in their distribution, and be limited in their extent of circulation, and certainly could not enable their recipients to respond immediately through the same medium.

Your letters would reach their recipients much quicker than the usual method of postage, without the initial cost of paper, envelope and a stamp. And if you wanted to change your mind or add more to your message, this could be possible even after distribution. Replies may even be instantaneous, resulting in an immediate response of your own, thus adding to the conversation which could elaborate further on the subject matter.

And it would be worth while reading other gentlemen’s letters on their similar methods of communication, just to keep in the know, monitor what your competitors are doing, and steal a march on other exciting projects by acting first. Every time you reply to these letters, your signature will allow other readers of these missives to find out who you are and read what you have written, thus extending your expertise in the subject and your presence in the community.

And there is also somewhere where you can leave your visiting card for interested persons to access, find out more about you, and even take the opportunity to visit you, either at your Club or in person. You would only have to distribute one visiting card, as it would be able to be seen by a great many more persons than leaving it on the table in a Club or another social meeting place in the hope that it might get noticed.

What other elements of a Victorian business man’s life might be improved if he had this wonderful innovation they call a ‘blog’?

10 ways to get your blog to catch on

Fairy Blog Mother

Sorry to break your bubble, but unless you are extremely lucky, a top notch celebrity or are posting on a subject that is incredibly popular, it will take some time before your blog starts to build an audience.

The usual time-frame is from 6-12 months, and this does depend on how you treat your blog. Neglect it, and nobody, not even the search engine spiders, will bother to visit. Stuff it full of top quality posts, and your following will grow accordingly. Blog every day, even several times a day, and of course you will get lots of traffic, especially if you are canny with your use of keywords, subject matter, frequency and timings of your posts, and a multitude of plugins and other apps designed to increase your blog’s exposure.

Here are some factors you could put into play to help your blog to catch on:

1. Keep on posting. Patience, persistence, consistency and quality will all contribute towards gaining a loyal audience. They will require and need continuous fresh material if you are to encourage them to return.

2. Promote your blog widely. Add in your blog’s URL in your social networking profiles, as well as feeding your blog into them so every time you post your fans and followers will get a chance to read your blog’s latest contribution. Use appropriate apps and plugins to make it easier for them to share or recommend.

3. Contribute on social media. Paste your posts on LinkedIn Groups, feed onto Facebook Fanpages, and answer a question in LinkedIn Answers with a link back to a relevant post on your blog.

4. Allocate tags and categories to your posts. Be aware of the keywords that are not only relevant to your post’s subject, but are also popular in the search criteria at that particular moment. Blogs are ideal for search engine optimisation, as long as you use it effectively.

5. Comment on other blogs. Choose the ones in your niche or relevant to your blog’s subject, as your contribution will have a link back to your blog. This will also give you the opportunity to build an identity or further your expertise in your chosen field. You can give your blog a head-start by adding in the plugin CommentLUV which helps towards leaving and hosting comments to further your blog.

6. Submit to blogging directories. Apart from the obvious, like Technorati.com, there are plenty of other directories to consider, such as bloglisting.net, blogcatalog.com, blogged.com – do some research, see what others use, or ask around for recommendations as to the best ones to use.

7. Participate and share. There are a number of social networking sites, such as Digg, Mixx, Reddit, StumbleUpon, Tumblr, Delicious and many more, that are designed to share blog posts through a voting system. Just like Facebook and Twitter, you build a following and comment, share or recommend each others’ blogs, and the most popular, or the ones with recommendations from a higher source, will gain in social levels and therefore visitor rates. This will work for high posting and quality contributions, as well as consistent participation on others’ blogs rather than promoting your own.

8. Become a guest blogger. Submit to MyBlogGuest.com to offer your services as a guest blogger, in which you can (subtly) link back to your blog with relevant references to the subject you are writing about. Don’t forget about blog carnivals, as contributing to them can certainly help your blog traffic.

9. Submit your blog’s URL elsewhere online. Promote your blog’s URL in your stationery, email signatures, newsletter publications, tweets and other social media updates, submit your posts to online magazines such as iSnare, EasyArticles, EzineArticles and ArticleDashboard (though make sure each contribution is slightly changed to avoid repetition penalties), and anywhere else people will get a chance to click on your blog’s URL.

10. Make RSS prominent. To encourage a loyal audience and maintain your readership, use RSS for subscriptions for email notifications or newsreaders in search engines. Place the sign up form or link high up on the sidebar to capture the attention of interested visitors, and the RSS URL itself can be used to help feed your blog posts onto social media.

Let me know if you can think of any more to add.

What does a forward slash signify?

Fairy Blog Mother

Driving to work today, a relevation came to me. For years I had just accepted the forward slash as being parts of a URL or web-address which I didn’t need to question. They seemed to be like the mortar that held the bricks together.

But now I understand them as gateways for the server (the hosting area where your domain name is held) to direct visitors (or spiders) to another portion (file/section/page/post) of your blog.

For example, the URL for this post http://fairyblogmother.co.uk/what-does-a-forward-slash-signify/ shows the domain name (the web address of this blog) followed by a door (the forward slash) to go to the page (the blog post) which contains the above title. (Don’t forget that each post has its own page and therefore a URL allocated to it.) The forward slash also allows these elements to be separated, comprehended and archived.

Let’s look at this URL for the beginning of my WordPress.com blog course: http://fairyblogmother.co.uk/com/create-a-blog/.  First is the domain name of this blog, with a door (slash) leading to the parent page ‘com’, with another door/slash which leads to a child page ‘create a blog’, with another slash ready should a grandchild page become available.

If you wrote the full URL without slashes, the server wouldn’t understand that a) the information was separated and b) which areas (page or file) it was to go to, and there would be no methods of conveying the blog user in the right direction.

Well, that’s my interpretation of the forward slash – what’s yours?

What and how important are permalinks?

Fairy Blog Mother

There is a industrial and successful marketeer called Ed Rivis who has acquired some creditable acclaim through his online marketing prowess, mainly in the use of online campaigns and the art of the landing page, but what astounds me is that he doesn’t optimise his permalinks on his blog!

But more of that later… so what is a permalink?

WordPress allocates each post with its own URL, created from the headline you give it:

Both kinds of blog

As you can see, this post has been given a permalink of http://fairyblogmother.co.uk/what-and-how-important-are-permalinks/ which WordPress has automatically created for me underneath the headline field. I also have the option to edit my permalink should I decide to change my headline while writing my post, or if I want to create a shorter, more memorable one. (There is also the more advanced option of a ‘shortlink’ if you want to use this permalink in social networking, such as Twitter.)

Most blog permalinks include the date within them, and look like this: http://successnetwork.wordpress.com/2010/06/01/5-things-to-consider-when-writing-adverts/ – so let me break it down for you.

• Note there isn’t www after the http:// because this is a blog, not a website;

• Next you’ll see the username of the original author of the blog: ‘successnetwork’;

• Followed by .wordpress.com because this is a WordPress.com or a ‘free’ blog (WordPress take control of your blog’s URL because they have provided all the software and programming for you, if you have a WordPress.org blog you can choose your own blog URL);

• Next is the date of the post: /2010/06/01/ (presented backwards) which is automatically calculated for you;

• And then you have the headline or title of the post: 5-things-to-consider-when-writing-adverts/ separated by hyphens so it’s easier for the spiders to read and for humans to quickly recognise.

If you have a WordPress.org blog, you have the chance to change how your permalinks look in Settings > Permalinks:

And you will see a number of options for how your permalink could look:

• Default = URL/?p=123 (post number)
• Day and name = URL/year/month/day/post name
• Month and name = URL/month/day/post name
• Numeric = URL/archive/post number
• Custom = whatever you want.

I have chosen ‘URL/post name’ as it makes it much easier to remember my permalinks and to write them in posts and browsers. If your categories are important to your search engine optimisation then these can be put into your permalink: ‘URL/category/post name’ for example. In fact, SEO is an important factor when considering your permalinks, but if stuffing it full of keywords and other goodies as well as what’s in the headline of your post is important to you, then go ahead, but take into consideration the length of your permalink and its practicalities, and that shortening it into tinyurls isn’t always the answer.

Oh, and another tiny point, it’s the permalinks that are live in RSS feeds, and when you are posting your latest blog contribution into a LinkedIn Group news section, the programming automatically recognises your permalink and everything associated with it for you!

So what of Ed Rivis? His latest post was http://www.edrivis.com/?p=517 – which means absolutely nothing to me except that he has probably written 516 more posts before this one. I have no idea what the subject is about (it is, actually, 77 ideas for great email and blog content) but I wouldn’t bother reading it because I only managed to glean about 8 that were worth considering! You’d think that an online marketing chap that is so famous and rich would have optimised his blog better – but no matter, it probably isn’t important to him.

Automatic archiving in a blog

Fairy Blog Mother

One client asked me whether she should have additional pages added to her blog in order to house archives of the posts she had written. She had visualised doing this manually every time she posted.

Both kinds of blog

I reassured her that this was done automatically, and far more extensively than she had imagined. This is where categories and tags come into play (see my e-course ‘Creating tags and categories’ to find out more) as these are the preliminaries to archiving your posts. Categories are the topics your posts are allocated to, and tags are the keywords used to focus the search engines onto your posts.

But let’s start at the beginning. Every time you write a post, it is published straight onto the main blog post page, which acts like a news roll with the newest post positioned at the top:

Here is the previous blog post I published to this one. The URL for my news roll page is http://fairyblogmother.co.uk/blog/ (because I have a separate homepage):

But if you click on the headline of that post, you will find that it has its own separate page:

And URL (http://fairyblogmother.co.uk/5-top-tips-for-a-successful-post/):

You may have noticed that the page title is different from the post’s headline, as that is the result of using the ‘All-in-one-SEO-pack’ plug-in which allows you to create more appropriate page titles for SEO purposes than your post’s headline.

Now, if you have read my ‘Creating tags and categories’ e-course, you will understand the importance of allocating your post to appropriate categories and relevant tags:

The bottom of each post lists which categories I have selected, and you will see they are live links. They are also listed in their separate widget in the sidebar. Click on any of the categories used (in this case Increasing Business Visibility) and you will see a separate page that contains the post:

and its allocated category URL: http://fairyblogmother.co.uk/category/visibility/

and page title Increasing Business Visibility | Fairy Blog Mother.

The same goes for the tags:

These tags are listed at the bottom of their allocated post, and listed in a ‘cloud’ within their respective widget on the sidebar. You can see that the most frequently used tags are larger than the others.

Let’s look at the tag ‘Keywords for SEO purposes’ that I chose for that post, and the page URL and title automatically created:

Note the /tag/ in between the URL and the tag name.

But it doesn’t stop there. There is an additional widget on my sidebar that shows my archives allocated to each month I post:

I have opted for the pull down menu which shows each month and the number of posts I have published. There is a separate page for each month with its own URL (http://fairyblogmother.co.uk/2010/05/ for May) and page title:

So for each post, there is a total of five pages it is allocated to once it is published. None of these are obvious, but the links are there at the bottom of the posts or within the widgets on the sidebar. And it’s a good thing it is automatic – could you imagine having to do all this by hand?

My experience of adding a homepage

Fairy Blog Mother

After I had completed my blogging visual e-course ‘Creating a front or index page’ which is the last link under my Free Resources library on the sidebar, I felt I needed to have a homepage of my own.

Both kinds of blog

I didn’t want to have the same ‘Welcome to XXX’ stuff that you see on so many websites, and I wanted to avoid the blurb that usually goes on about how wonderful the business is without any thought for the customers.

By putting your customers first, you’re supposed to write your copy using more ‘you’ rather than ‘I’ or ‘we’, but instead I’ve created an interview with questions and answers, concentrating on what the Fairy Blog Mother does and why she wants to help bloggers.

And I’ve peppered it with some testimonials that I felt would help reinforce my cause. (Incidently, if any of you want to give me some, I’ll gladly post them up!)

Right, how did I put up a homepage? The first thing, apart from deciding what to say, was to create a new page. (See my ‘Creating pages’ e-course on my sidebar.) Now in deciding what to put in the title field, I experimented using trial and error, bearing in mind that it would appear in my navigation bar at the top of my blog. Too long looked ridiculous, too short was meaningless. In fact I finally ended up a totally original ‘Homepage’!

Then I created my questions as images, and uploaded them into my images file in FileZilla. I could have put them into my media library (see ‘Putting in Pictures’) but I have hundreds of pictures on this blog and it’s easier to upload them in bulk into an image file. (I’ll write a post soon on how to do this.)

Each image has its attached answer, carefully edited so they fit the space accordingly.

After publishing this page, giving it a hierarchy of 1 so it appears at the beginning of the navigation bar, I created another empty page called ‘Blog’, gave it a hierarchy of 2 and also published it.

Now comes the clever bit. Going to ‘Settings > Reading’ you’ll notice the first section ‘Front page displays’. Click the ‘static page’ button and fill in the fields with your home and blog pages. There you’ll see evidence of my totally inadequate title and its consequences!

Look at the navigation bar at the top!

So I tried to amend the situation with a better title and another title (using the H1 tag) in the text body – culminating in the present solution.

But if you look in my navigation bar you’ll see two ‘Homes’, and I’m sure this could be corrected if I was techie enough to go behinds the scenes and play with the code, but instead this is why I changed it to the present ‘Homepage’ – a total cop out, but never mind, it works!

How to put a Twitter badge on your blog

Fairy Blog Mother

Look down my sidebar and you’ll see a large purple box, or badge, that shows my latest Twitter updates.

Today I’ll show you how to put one up on your WordPress.org blog. This is, unfortunately, not possible on your WordPress.com blog as it requires HTML script, but there is a widget available that will show the RSS feed of your Twitter stream. You can view how to install that from my ‘What and how to use widgets’ e-course.

Update for 15 April 2011: A new version of Twitter is out, so a revised version of this post has been written. It covers how to create a Twitter badge, but not how to put it into your blog – rejoin this post when you are ready to do that procedure.

First, go to your Twitter profile:

and pan down to the bottom links:

Click on the link ‘Goodies’:

And click on ‘Widgets’:

And choose ‘My Website’:

And click on ‘Profile Widget’:

Fill in your Twitter username in the field, and then select ‘Preferences’:

Tick the boxes you require (I’ve selected scroll bar, show 5 tweets, and confirmed the timestamps and hashtags), and then select ‘Appearance’:

Here I chose the colours I wanted to dress my badge up in. You can choose from the selection offered to you (click on the coloured squares and a pop up box with a selection will appear), or if you know the hex code of your colours like I do (#800080 is that magenta colour) fill those in the appropriate field in the pop up box. Have a play until you get what you like (it will show up in the example on the right, or click the ‘Test settings’ button at the bottom to view). Next click on ‘Dimensions’:

If you know your sidebar’s dimensions in pixels (!), put that in. My guess at 200 width was fine. The length is up to you, but I didn’t want my badge to dominate my sidebar, so I made it just a little bit longer at 250. The scroll-bar allowed the bottom tweets to be seen. There’s always the auto-width box to tick if you wish.

Now click on the ‘Finish and Grab Code’ button:

Highlight and copy the code. Now open your blog in another window and go to the dashboard:

Select ‘Widgets’ under ‘Appearances’:

Find and drag a text widget into your desired space on your sidebar. When it opens, past the badge’s code into it:

Don’t forget to click the ‘Save’ button. Now you can go to your blog through the ‘View Site’ button at the top and look at your brand new badge in your sidebar:

Hope you like it! Keep popping back to check it works – it’s so much fun seeing your latest Tweets appear as if by magic!

How to stop your blog from failing

Both kinds of blog

A blog should be a medium for communicating with your readers. They are somewhere to provide interesting information that will educate your audience, produce compelling content that will explain your business in a different light, provide an insight into another side of a topic, and allow you to express your knowledge and expertise within your niche.

Self-hosted blogs allow monetizing, such as affiliate links, badge advertising and other ways of making money, but if your blog is geared totally towards selling, that’s where it will fall down. You could use WordPress to adapt your blog into a website (or blogsite), with pages that contain selling points for services or products, but it should not resemble a blog that’s sole aim is to sell.

Blogs should be subjective and informative, and unless you’re really famous or a particular personality, talking totally about yourself is a turn-off. OK, occasionally turn the conversation around to include an anecdote that might explain a point better, provide a story that would be of benefit for your readers, or relay a funny incident to provide some light entertainment, but if the posts are constantly about you, it’s not a good idea.

A blog with nothing in it is ‘like a cheese sandwich’. What this means is without regularly posting on your blog, it quickly becomes stale and a neglected blog will soon appear ‘dead’. Blogs thrive on new content, just like the search engine spiders who are programmed to visit blogs far more frequently than websites, and your regular visitors will soon tire of looking for new posts which never come.  What would a new visitor think if they arrived on your blog to find the last post was over three months ago?

If you are blogging to raise your profile, and increase the exposure of your business, don’t give up too quickly. Just as with networking and other forms of marketing, it can take time to build relationships with your readership, the blogosphere, the search engine spiders, and other social media users. Longevity helps blogs become established, as does the quality of the content and the prowess of their authors.

Writing good posts takes practice, and as you gain in experience, you’ll learn from others in the same niche (if you follow their blogs, which I thoroughly recommend) and pick up good tips. To master your technique may even take years (I would certainly give it at least six months), and if you consistently contribute during that time, just think what a mind of information your blog will become by then!