Tag Archive for 'Blogging tips'

Blogging tips #4.8 - Avoid premature promotion

(NOTE: this is part of the “Blogging tips” series)

I thought about calling this part “prevent premature promotion”, but I’m not Stan Lee. :) Anyway…

“Promotion”, in this case, is adding your blog to search engines and directories, asking friends and other people to link to it, linking to it yourself in your other blogs or sites (if you have any), adding it to sites like Technorati, Blogshares, etc….

And “premature”, of course, means “before the right time”. “What do you mean, right time? Shouldn’t I do everything in my power to promote my new blog, as soon as the blogging equivalent of a “Hello World” program is in there?”, you may ask.

Nope. It’s a bad idea. It’s not the end of the world, but it will harm you in the long run, and may take some time to recover from.

Premature promotion of a blog is the equivalent of newspaper ads for a new store, saying “open now!”, which, when people go there, is still under construction, with a sign saying “opening soon”. Nobody with half a brain would do that, right? (which means that only people who wear ties would do it.)

Think about it this way: anyone who goes to your blog or site and sees nothing of interest there… will probably never come back. That’s a lost visitor. Forever. Someone who could have become a regular visitor if only he or she had come there after there was something interesting to see.

So, when should you promote your site? At least, consider the following:

  • The site should have a couple of articles - 5 or more, if possible, but at least a couple of them. And most of them should be actual content, not a “welcome to my blog” message.
  • The site should be search-engine friendly. That means, among other things, no broken links, proper HTML, all the site’s sections in working order…
  • You should be using the definitive theme, not the original one which “came with the software” (unless that’s the one you’ll be using). “Definitive” doesn’t have to mean that you’ll never change it - just that you won’t change it tomorrow.
  • In general, your blog should no longer be “in testing”. If you’re still trying out plugins, enable and disabling features, testing stuff… it’s too early. Finish those tests first.

After all of that, unleash hell! Unless you’re a small child, or a Christian fundamentalist, in which case, unleash heck! :)

EDIT: An important exception: suppose you have just registered your domain, but the site won’t be “live” for some time; in that case, add it to Google (at least) as soon as the domain is up and you have something there - even a simple “Under construction” page. The reason for this is the Google Sandbox - it usually affects “new” sites, and if Google has known about yours for months, it won’t be seen as “new”. But do all the submitting again when your site goes “live”.

Blogging tips #15: Making money from your blog - AdSense: the competitive filter

(NOTE: this is part of the “Blogging tips” series)

AdSense’s competitive ad filter is, as the name suggests, a way to prevent some ads from appearing in your blog/site. While it’s targeted towards companies, especially commercial sites, in order to prevent absurdities such as a Coca Cola ad in Pepsi’s web site :), it can also be useful for blogs - even personal ones. There are two reasons for it: one which will apply to some people, and one which should matter to everyone.

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Blogging tips #5: Adding your blog to search engines and directories

(NOTE: this is part of the “Blogging tips” series)

(WARNING: you really should read, at least, #3 - valid HTML and #4 - making your blog search engine-friendly before you do this one)

Now, the fun begins. Your blog is already interesting, you love doing it, its HTML is valid, and its ready for search engines. So, let them come!

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Blogging tips #3: Valid HTML

(NOTE: this is part of the “Blogging tips” series)

I’m sure a lot of people won’t think this one is relevant, but my experience says it is.

You know what HTML is, right? Most of you probably do. You don’t have to know it to have a blog, though, especially if you use a service like Blogger or LiveJournal - they mostly take care of the hard work. That’s why blogging is for everyone, not just “computer people”.

Still, it won’t take a lot of time or work to ensure your blog - every part of it - is made of valid HTML. I’ll talk about the advantages of it in a moment.

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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Portugal