Search Results for: critique

How to Create a Blog that People Want to Read

Bee an attractive blogger

What is the difference between a popular blog and an ignored one?

This is a surprisingly complicated question to answer.

Great content is a given.

No, that’s not where it ends. It is not as simple as “content is king”, no matter how many times that nugget is repeated. There are thousands of well written blogs out there with little or no traffic.

So promotion needs to be added to the mix.

Sometimes it is seemingly small things. On occasion tips and tweaks I suggest in my blog critiques make for big differences.

Structure, usability and architecture come into play. A good foundation to allow the content to shine and breathe.

I have a theory though. All of the vital ingredients are not the cause of the popularity, but the key symptoms.

Popular blogs are powerfully tailored to their audience.

Think of the flowers that attract bees to pollinate them. They take advantage of the bees own selfish motivations and needs to get something they need. To have the best chance of success they create a compelling environment, the right visual, attractive scent. It’s the perfect win-win. Bee and flower go away happy.

How are you getting to know the particular needs and desires of your audience so that you can create the perfect experience for your bees?

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WordCamp UK 2008

WordCampUK 2008 pics at flickr

I got back from WordCamp UK last night, tired but happy.

If you missed the event you don’t need to miss out as I took quite a few Qik clips of various sessions and there will be video provided by Benjamin and Sam.  Unfortunately I could not film the whole thing in real time as the conference wifi while perfectly fine on my laptop didn’t like my phone very much.

As I look around the various comments and write-ups that are appearing I am remembering different bits of the weekend, one of the great advantages of blogging conferences is you get it recorded, sliced, diced, processed and critiqued from all angles :)

The weekend in my view was a great success, not least because it actually happened. Tony and the other organisers did a fantastic job and chose an excellent location. I would be very happy if next years is same time and same place.

In terms of presentations there was something for everybody, and the audience was very diverse so that in particular was a tough trick to pull off. If I would make one suggestion about content, perhaps next year less organised and more Q&A based?

For my own talk I kinda picked the short straw, late Sunday where everyone was full of beer and burgers, and I saw at least a third of the attendees yawning before I even got up to walk to the podium.

Chris Garrett WordCampUK 2008

The Twitter back-channel was in full snarky force, I seem to have gotten off comparatively lightly ;)

For those who were concerned, both Chris Garretts met and the world did not implode.

Chris Garretts

As I said in my previous WordCamp post, there are ProBlogger book prizes for whoever does the best writeup as voted by list members and WordCampUK blog readers, so make sure you write up your own thoughts or nominate the best that you find. Let me know in the comments any links.

Credits: Main photographs by Benjamin Ellis , thumbs from the Flickr WordCampUK tag stream

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Who SHOULD Blog?

In my last post I took the unusual step of suggesting there are people who should avoid blogging.

While I am complete card-carrying, t-shirt wearing, tattooed on my brain blogging advocate, even I realize there are people who would be best off being blog readers than blog writers. It just is not for everybody, and that is fine.

That said, who should blog?

  • Have a passion? Something that you would stay interested in through bad and good times? Regardless of profit?
  • Enjoy creating, building content, sharing what you know?
  • Most important, enjoy discussing your passion?

If you answer yes to one of more of those questions then I think you would make a good blogger. While there is a high frequency of abandoned blogs, passion and the will (or need) to communicate that passion can overcome a lot of the reasons why people give up blogging.

Gareth CrewWhile I don’t want to embarrass him (other than the bad photo), the other day I met someone who meets the profile.

Gareth Crew runs a site with his friend Stuart Carter, called MotoGPNews and it is a community for motor sport enthusiasts. Before he had to give up due to injuries, Gareth raced motorbikes, so he is not just an armchair critic or someone who thinks this is a big-money niche. In fact, his site barely approaches any kind of monetization at all. Just look around the site, there is not a trace of ego.

I can see right away a whole bunch of ways I would improve the site but having the passion and the knowledge is a far better foundation than ticking technical and marketing boxes while missing that vital ingredient!

You can learn to write well. Marketing is a matter of having the right strategy and implementing the best tactics. Information can be researched, knowledge can be learned. Experience is a matter of sticking with it. I can help with anything blogging or webmastering, but the one thing you have to find within yourself is passion and motivation.

Challenge – Win a Copy of the ProBlogger Book

Right here I would normally launch into a blog critique, but I am taking the day off :) The person who, in Gareth’s opinion, gives the best advice or critique will win a copy of the ProBlogger book!

Write your tips, criticism or suggestions on your own blog, on the MotoGPNews contact form, or right here in the comments before Wednesday July 23rd.

Go take a look at the site and start making notes now! Good luck :)

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Humbled Eyes Photography Blog Critique

This blog critique is for Rob Nicholson of Humbled Eyes Photography.

Photographers have the following main goals with their blog if they are going to be effective in attracting paying customers:

  1. Draw in visitors
  2. Generate interest
  3. Demonstrate professional ability
  4. Communicate personality
  5. Build towards action

As you can tell from this list, it’s not as simple as slapping a blog onto your site and watching the search juice kick in.

Rob has done a good job of putting his photography front and center, and his photographic ability shines out of his work. That said, there are a number of ways he can make his site work harder for him.

Design and Usability

When a visitor arrives you need to tell them where they are, why they should care, and what they can look at. You want them to know certain things, such as that you are a “Destination Wedding Photographer” (according to your keywords) and so on.

Make sure that you actually explain what those phrases mean. Not only will explaining help you with searchers, but you need to describe the benefits. Why should a visitor care? Is there any reason to pick you, or your category of photographer, over any other?

I think you need to select a theme that better shows off your photographs. As they are currently displayed your beautiful pictures practically need a magnifying glass to appreciate them. Remember blog readers will initially skim, make an impact. Even better, get a custom design that really prioritizes and displays your work. You might want to consider incorporating some sort of gallery + post combination so your most recent work is always displayed, magazine style.

Content

There are some important pages you really need to have at a minimum, either create them or pull them out and put in your navigation:

  • About – Right now your about isn’t about much at all. Who are you? What do you do? Is that important? Necessary? Valuable? Why would someone choose you over someone else? What do you have to offer and why should we believe you?
  • Contact – Your current about is more like a contact, but I prefer to provide a contact form rather than an email address. If you are going to show your telephone number, have a think about what it is you have missed off. I will give you a clue. I live in the UK, how do I call your number? When should I call you? You might think you are only looking for local business, and that is fine … until a journalist from the BBC tries to get in touch and gives up in favor of your friend down the road who lists his country code and time zone ;) List your country code and say what times and timezone you are available in.
  • Services – Where do you describe what you do? How much does it cost? How do you go about booking you? Remember many people are going to land deep in your blog, they are not going to even see your flash based site because there is no way to get there, especially if they have clicked a link or arrived via a search engine.

As I always always say, allow your readers to subscribe with email along with RSS and explain why someone would want to! Right now you have tucked away an RSS button, while 90% of your visitors won’t know what that represents.

Use categories sparingly, in fact both for your users and your search rankings you are normally better off one category per post. Make them meaningful to visitors, don’t prioritize search phrases over usability.

SEO Tweaks

First SEO tweak is the old favorite, www and non-www URLs both work. Redirect one to the other.

Next, because the commercial site is flash and popups, neither of which are particularly search friendly (I will leave the discussion for if those tactics are human-friendly), the SEO last-resort has been brought into play …

Destination Wedding Photographer - Jamaica wedding photographer - Delaware wedding photographer

Instead of a block of keyword-laden copy, instead create actual content intended for humans on that page. Search engines are designed to do a good job of promoting good stuff and downgrading the less useful stuff, so if you build for human beings you don’t need this kind of thing.

While we are on the topic, don’t let others do the same thing and leach off your comment area either!

When embedding photographs, describe them well. Think like a stock photographer, what could you tag your photographs with that both explains the picture for non-sighted users and search engines, but would also attract people in using, say, Google Image search. Currently Prince Charles is called “wedding photography”. Now, I am not a monarchist, but even I see the celebrity value in these pictures. Be proud of them, show them off, you don’t often get credibility building content like this!

Finally on the SEO side, and also thinking about usability, connect your site and your blog with links. Right now to both search engines and people the two are separate sites. I recommend putting a link in your main navigation, but don’t hesitate to deep link to important content both ways.

Summary

Rob has a talent, and the blog is an excellent start. I think the main thing to take away from this critique is that the emphasis has to come back to the human needs, what will most please, benefit and assist human visitors. How can you meet their needs and encourage a deeper connection? Right now the bias seems to be on SEO?

Find some friendly non-webby people, print off the blog and site homepages, and ask your volunteers to describe what they see, how they would navigate, and what they would do if they were interested in your services. You might gain some insights into the sorts of welcoming content and navigation you need.

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Blog SEO: Boost Your Search Rankings With Internal Links

One of the common issues I find with my blog critiques is people not utilizing internal links to boost their search rankings as much as they could. Do not underestimate the influence a good internal link structure can have on your rankings! Also internal linking is good usability for readers. You want visitors to find more of ...

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Good Questions Make Great Content

It’s OK to not have all the answers. Let’s face it, everything changes so fast, it’s hard to keep up with absolutely everything. Sometimes though we have burning questions that Google can’t solve. What should we do?

Well, as bloggers, a great thing to do is to ask the question and publish the answers.

If you don’t know the answer, it could well be lots of people want to know too. Plus, if you can’t find the answer in Google then you just might have an idea that will bring you regular search traffic if you implement it right. It’s always a good thing to get your audience thinking and involved. Even if their response is “I don’t know, but good question!” :)

Sometimes there is no right or wrong answer, but opinions can create valuable discussions which are still attractive content, thought provoking, community building and good for entertainment and engagement. Just look at Liz’ Open Mike discussions.

The question does not always have to be asked on your blog either. It might be that you know a forum or discussion list with topical experts on board, or it might be that you need to cast your net wide and get the biggest possible response by asking in multiple places.

Here are five ways to get answers outside of comments that jump to mind: 

  1. Twitter - For my post about getting the most out of LinkedIn I asked for suggestions on Twitter. Twitter, after my blog, is my go-to place for getting quick answers as I know I will get a response. Of course you need a few followers first!
  2. LinkedIn – I have only asked one question on LinkedIn and just got the one response, but it was a good one. Others have far more success. LinkedIn is chock full of business people, and is probably more appropriate for those kinds of issues, but also those people have lives outside of business so might be worth a try.
  3. Yahoo! Answers - Same kind of deal as LinkedIn answers but wider in audience and more general purpose and more consumer oriented.
  4. A survey/poll – Rather than just ask a question and get responses in comments, surveys and polls can be useful for narrowing the answers for quantitative results as I have done in my blogging survey (still a chance to win a book or blog critique!)
  5. Email – If you know certain people will have the answers you need then email them. If you make it easy and quick to answer you might be surprised at the responses you get. I did this with my Cluetrain Social Media article and is something Jonathan Fields does routinely to great effect.

Make sure you always credit the people who provide answers. Also try to give people credit even if you disagree with what they say, show all sides.

Got any tips to share? Do you ask questions in your blogging? How? Or do you prefer blogs to be about answers? Please share in the comments …

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The Art of Nonconformity Blog Critique

Chris Guillebeau is one of those people who absolutely lives his philosophy. His blog is about travel and “Nonconformity” and you can believe he follows his own advice 100%. Recently Chris and Reese Spykerman worked up a fresh design and asked me to provide some feedback, so here is their critique.

Note on Blog Critiques

If you don’t have the funds right now to buy one of my critiques, you can still win one by filling out the survey. Also you can pick up tips for your own blog right here. While reading any of my blog critiques, see if any of the advice could apply to you. I find that many bloggers could make the same improvements, and it is amazing the difference even small changes can make.

The Critique – Initial Impressions

The first thing I always do when looking at a blog for a critique is to note my initial impressions. This is useful because a visitor to a new blog is going to give you seconds before deciding to move on or look further. Consider a visitor arriving through stumbleupon, what is going to hold their attention before hitting the stumble button once more?

I find overall the blog looks very nice, clean, clear, professional while still friendly, if a little “shy”.

What I mean by that is I feel it is a touch restrained. Everything feels polite and quiet, from the colors to the navigation. The fonts are small, even in the header. Never be afraid to spell things out, never over estimate the reader, make everything simple and plainly obvious. Your audience will no doubt be clever, but that doesn’t mean they have the patience to figure stuff out. So buttons with clever little pictures? Put captions with them that SAY “Travel”, etc. Right now the tooltips say the same thing by the way, which is confusing until you see the URL changes.

Rather than a closeup picture of Chris there is quite a long shot. Perhaps replace with a more intimate picture showing head and shoulders? Right now we feel at waving distance, let’s see what you actually look like so we can feel more connected to you?

Usability

The Art of Nonconformity Critique
Blog Usability Advice [Click to Zoom]

What do you look for when you see a site for the first time?

Where am I?
What is here?
Why should I care?

Any blog should quickly and simply answer these questions, using for example

  1. The header – Does it tell you where you are and why you should bother?
  2. Headlines – Do they stand out and interest you?
  3. Navigation – Is there anything of further interest or should you move on?

In this case I think we get a good overall impression but until you work further down or dig into the content, it’s a little self-referential. I would suggest a small tweak to the tagline. Currently it says “Unconventional Strategies for Life, Work and Travel”. Perhaps alter that to something about the reader benefit, such as

“Learn Strategies for a More Unconventional Life, Work and Travel”

I’m sure with some thought you can improve on that, my point is purely to make it an active promise showing a reader benefit, not a passive content description or statement.

We also will look around the blog looking for cues of interest, read down the sidebar, skim the article after looking at the headline, and so on. There are certain conventions too, like having the subscription options top right, categories and more posts to the right, and about and contact in the top navigation.

Chris’ blog succeeds very well in several areas:

  • Site Summary – In the sidebar there is a nice summary of what the site is about
  • Buttons in Nav – While the header doesn’t speak “nonconformity” or “travel” to me, the buttons do represent the categories
  • The content – Read the content, it is excellent, and is presented well with basics and most popular

Tips for Improvement

  1. Make the header bolder and consider adding something visual that says “travel” etc. If you sent your header to 20 people who had never seen it before, could they tell you what the site is about? Yours is better than most, but consider taking it up a notch.
  2. Add text to the button icons in the top navigation and fix the tooltips. Never be afraid to be obvious. Obvious works better than cute or clever every time.
  3. Make headlines and the very top navigation text links bigger and more obvious, right now they are too easily missed. Imagine your reader has bad eyes and is in a rush.
  4. Move the “What would Seth do” box (“If you are new here”) to above the content. Readers want to go headline/skim, intro, content. Do not break the reading flow. Also consider removing the line that splits the headline from the article content
  5. Where you have subscribe by email, consider adding the actual form, you might see more signups
  6. Make articles skimmable, a good tip when you use images is you can add a caption underneath your pictures that both describes the picture and draws the reader in like another subhead
  7. Swap the globe picture in the “Summary” as a background image so doesn’t take up as much vertical space? Above the fold is still the most visible, even though now readers do scroll more than they did
  8. Put a link to most popular content up with (more visible) top navigation as well as sidebar – don’t be shy about promoting your best stuff!
  9. In the “about” sections try to find ways to make it answer the “so what?” question – what should the reader gain?
  10. You don’t monetize, which is fair enough, but is there a way that grateful readers can help you in some way? Donations? Freelance work? A place to stay? Readers can and do give back if you provide the opportunity.

Get More Subscribers and Traffic

Before I mentioned that the email subscription box should be made into an actual form, but then I noticed as I browsed around the box disappeared on certain pages? Subscriptions should be visible on every page unless that would mean duplicating them in a distracting way (eg. on a dedicated subscribe page).

My last tip is about a prime piece of real estate that is not being used to the full …

The Art of Nonconformity Blog Critique
Your Best Chance at a New Subscriber

Right after a reader has enjoyed your post is the best opportunity to get them to do something, send to friend, subscribe or vote in Social Media, but you can’t just “ask”, you have to make it as easy as possible.

So while you have the right idea, use Sociable or another plugin to put in social buttons, and links to your subscription options for RSS and email, and so on. It’s the law of reciprocation, get them while they still feel the warm glow of gratitude.

Summary

Don’t take my suggested improvements as a knock, this is a great blog and is now a fixture in my RSS reader. As I say in the introduction, it is clear Chris really lives this stuff and that shines through in the excellent content. Make sure you subscribe today so you too can learn to be more unconventional!

Have you got any tips for Chris? Do you agree/disagree with any of my advice or anything to add? Please share in the comments …

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Blogging Survey: Half Way Report

Last week I mentioned my Global Blogging Survey and your chance to win one of 10 ProBlogger books. Well we are just over half way to the magic 1000 submissions mark, can we get some more?

If the total can get to 1000 or more then the results will be more reliable and statistically “ok”. It’s always better to draw conclusions from a good base rather than infer something that might not be based on anything real.

As well as 10 books I am going to sweeten the pot. One lucky submitter will receive a blog critique right here on this blog outlining all the advice you need to take your blogging to the next level.

So if you haven’t filled in the survey, please do it now. It takes mere minutes. Tell your fellow bloggers. Bring friends!

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Boost Your Subscribers, Links and Sales with Flagship Content

What is the one most powerful addition you can make to your blog or site to drive more subscribers links and sales? You guessed it, Flagship Content! This could be A PDF ebook or White Paper A comprehensive blog series An audio or video download Or even a survey with results Flagship Content works as an ambassador for your blog. It draws ...

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Doug Scott’s Blog Critique

Yesterday I drove down to the middle of the country to meet up with Doug Scott. He might not look like much ( ;) ), and the name might not be familiar to you but he is a bit of a ...

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