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Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Mar 21st
It’s going to happen. It’ll happen because it’s March and you’ve run through all your “good topics” already. It’ll happen because you’re busy and mentally fried. Or sometimes it’ll happen because it’s simply too sunny and beautiful outside to be working. Whatever the case, at some point you are going to look at your blog and decide that you have absolutely nothing left to write about it. And then you’re going to close your laptop and step away.
Don’t do that!

If you close out of your blog, you may not open it again. Instead, pick from one of these six post-savers. They’re the standby content to go to when you have absolutely nothing else to write about. Not…that I’ve ever been there. Never.
1. Write About How You Started
Behind every business is a great story. If you created your own business there was a problem in the industry you were trying to solve. There was something unique that drove you and that still drives you. Let people in on your secret and how you accomplished it.
If you work for someone else, how did you get there? Or what behind-the-scenes-story does that company have that your customers may be surprised to know? What would make them feel something about your brand?
Write it down and share it. Who know, it may even help you put more of you on your Web site and convert a potential customer. Think about it – you could land a new deal tomorrow simply because you didn’t have anything to write about today. Pretty awesome, eh?
2. Pimp Out A Product/Service Page, Share It
If you’re not feeling your blog today, look elsewhere. To your product or services pages perhaps? Is there a page on your site that you feel could use a little more attention? Maybe it means adding some additional information to better explain the product/service, or including video to make it more engaging, or editing a page to add humor and a bit of yourself. Once you’ve created this standout page, share it. Blog about it. Tweet it. Facebook it. Let people know that it exists. Doing so will give more attention to the product/service you decided to focus on (which could mean more sales), but it will also help drive people deeper into your Web site where conversions happen.
3. Interview Someone You Admire
If you don’t have anything unique to say today, find someone who does. Who were you chatting with on Twitter yesterday when they said something that stopped you in your tracks? Or maybe it wasn’t online, maybe it was a customer who came into your store and shared their experience trying to find you. Or something else that made you take notice? Call them up and do a quick five question interview with them. Five questions is the perfect amount to pull out an interesting tidbit, without monopolizing someone’s time or make them feel like they need to prepare beforehand. Keep it fast, friendly and informational.
4. Transcribe Videos
Why not give yourself an SEO boost and transcribe some of the videos you have on your Web site? Whether the video is an interview, a product demo, a How To, or a clip of you speaking at your local chamber of commerce, proving that transcription can not only help you rank in local search, it’s also another resource for your customers. You may want to refer back to my SmallBizTrends post on how to add transcripts to your YouTube videos for additional help and ideas.
5. Write About Your Best/Worst Experience
We all have them and we all remember them. We have that great customer service story that made us a loyal fan for life of our cable company or our gym. We also have that story that absolutely horrified us and made us reevaluate the way we do business and the way we expect to be treated in business. Share them both. These kinds of posts are universal and they’ll help your customers relate to you on a more human level.
6. Share A Product You Love
As a small business owner, you’re constantly trying out different products, apps and services to help you do your job better and more efficiently. Maybe it’s a time tracker app, an invoicing program, or the way you stay in touch with employees on the go. Do a review and let your audience know all about you. By opening up about the technology you use to run your business, you give people a more transparent view into how things operate. You may also help solve their business problems. And who wouldn’t appreciate that?
Finding new, interesting things to blog about on a regular basis is tough. But instead of admitting defeat, why not turn to some old standbys to help get you through that dry spell?
What To Do When You Have Nothing to Blog About
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Mar 19th
Develop The Midas Touch And Turn Every Affiliate Campaign Into Massive Profits & Ramp Up Your Monthly Commissions Using Dead Simple Strategies!
Affiliate Blog Secrets
Mar 19th
Learn How To Flip Blogs For Full-time Profits. Amazing Conversions And You Earn 75% Of Every Sale. Find Out All The Details From Here – Http://www.blogflipz.com/affopt
Blogflipz Dot Com Blog Flipping Training System
Mar 14th
A number of sessions from the Affiliate Management Days conference, which ran from March 8th through March 9th, 2012, were covered here at Small Business Trends. The seven article series of live coverage featured topics of interest to businesses that offer affiliate programs.
The AMDays conference focused solely on helping merchants learn how to make their affiliate programs more successful, how to recruit and support their affiliates better, and how to sell more through affiliates.
However, Small Business Trends wasn’t the only one covering the event. Additional live coverage was being broadcast from the blogosphere of this first ever conference. So I’d like to bring you a list of all the coverage from day one of the event (or, at least, all the ones that I could find):
AMDays would like your opinion on your preference for the location of the next Affiliate Management Days East conference, which is coming in October 2012. Please express it by participating in the poll “Location for Affiliate Management Days East 2012: Boston or Florida?”
Stay tuned! A live blog recap of day two of this event is coming soon.
Day One Live Blog Recap: Affiliate Management Days West 2012 #AMDays
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Feb 14th
Blogs are now the norm. You’ve probably added a blog to your site – because that’s what you’re supposed to do. If that’s the case, then you may not be getting the interaction you had hoped for and you’re wondering why everyone is so psyched about using blogs to build their business and yours is just sitting there.

Below are 8 simple strategies to take your blog from blah to brilliant:
Name your blog. Consider treating your blog as an online magazine or newsletter and give it a name. Make your blog name memorable and fun. Another tip is to create a name that describes the kind of information that you’ll be sharing with your readers. Keep the name short and easy to spell – especially if you want your blog to have its own domain name. Names like Smitten Kitchen, Sprouted Kitchen or Fooducate are just a sampling of names of blogs in the food category as an example.
Take a stand. Another challenge small business blogs face is taking a stand or creating a point-of-view from which to write. This is where you reach into the mission or purpose of your business. I like to call it standing on your soapbox. Think about the strong opinions you have about your industry or how things are done and then use those opinions to color your writing. These opinions will not only make your articles fun to read, they will actually reinforce your brand to your readers. Taking a strong stand on your area of expertise will not only differentiate your blog from others, it will start attracting those readers and customers who share those opinions as well – and that means more ideal customers for you.
Survey the blogosphere. You might get lucky and be so clear on your point of view that you won’t need to see what else is out there. But if you find yourself stuck, you should surf the blogosphere for blogs about your industry, product or topic. Read those and take a few notes about what you like, what you don’t like and what’s missing. You will find yourself forming an opinion about those blogs and then naturally incorporating those insights as you start creating your blog and your point of view.
Adapt strategies from outside your industry. Another tip is to notice which blogs you like to read and why – even if they aren’t in your industry or area of expertise. Create a list of those blogs and note why you like them. Is it their writing style? Is it the way the articles are structured? What keeps you coming back for more?
Try a few on for size. There’s no better way to get clear on your style or point of view than to actually challenge yourself to write some articles based on the styles that you’ve researched. I have this article on 52 kinds of blog posts bookmarked so that I can take on a new type of post and not get into a rut.
Keep an ideas file. The downfall of most small business blogs is “writer’s block” or not knowing what to write about. First think of your blog as a promotional opportunity. You can share ways that you’ve solved problems for customers, interview people in your customer service department and get some of their most frequently asked questions and then answer them. Go inside your operation and give customers a “back-door” look or tour on exactly how you maintain quality and make sure that things get done right and get done on time.
Go into the day’s headlines and education your readers on how your industry or business might be impacted. Share some insider secrets or time-saving tips on how to use your product. You can even put a post out there that lays out an idea that you have for improving your product or service and engage your customers to chime in with their opinions and feedback.
Use Google Reader or FlipBoard on the iPad. Take the time to set up a comprehensive list of blogs that you will follow. You don’t have to read every post every day – trust me. My Google Reader has over 1000 unread articles in there. But all of those articles come in handy when it comes to creating an informative article when ideas are running low.
Offer a call to action in each post. You can treat your blog posts as soft sales letters. Write each article with the intent to educate and persuade customers to engage with you and buy from you. Don’t be obnoxious about it, do it in the same way that you would if you were actually in a sales conversation. Give your customers something to click on to help them solve a problem.
If you’re not using your blog as a way to engage and attract customers, you are just wasting time and effort. Your blog is an incredible sales and marketing tool and you should treat it as such. Work on a marketing strategy to turn your blog into a real lead generator and you’ll not only have a lot of readers, but a lot of customers.
Fireworks Photo via Shutterstock
8 Simple Strategies: Take Your Blog From Blah to Brilliant
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Feb 9th
How to Use a WordPress Blog as a Referral Generator
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
I’ve seen and heard this scenario countless times. Two perfectly suited strategic partners determine they should start doing some things together in an effort to create referral opportunities for each other.
They shake hands and agree that it’s a fabulous idea, but then nothing happens. Mostly nothing happens because there’s no catalyst to get the ball rolling in a way that makes sense.
I mean, sure, they could both send out a mass mailing to their clients professing how great the other is, but would that really offer much value to the recipients?
One of the best ways to get a referral relationship moving is through content opportunities. It’s just such a logical way to extend what is already a proven marketing practice.
If you would like to build a killer local referral generator you should look no further than hosting a multi-author WordPress blog. (It doesn’t have to be WordPress, it’s just the best tool.)
Let’s say you’re an attorney that works with small business owners. In your work you’ve seen that small business owners need accounting advice, hiring advice, management advice, marketing advice, real estate advice, outsourcing advice, selling advice, leadership advice, and the list goes on and on.
Well, what if you built a team of best of class advice providers for many of the items listed above and you created and hosted a blog that featured contributions from each of these providers.
With any commitment at all your team could produce a local, keyword rich, content asset that would turn into a valuable resource for your clients and prospects and a logical referral generator for every member of the contributing team.
Of course, this could just be the start of your formal partnership team as you could easily turn this into group sponsored workshops and online seminars as well. Are you starting to see the power behind being the one that formalizes the network?
I hope it goes without saying that the content must be educational and valuable. This effort will offer little if it’s just an ad for all parties. Give great advice openly, use local keywords and phrases and create a consistent flow of new content and this tool will allow you to dominate local search results.
Creating a multi-author WordPress blog isn’t any more difficult that creating a single author blog, but there are a few considerations when it comes to promoting, managing and securing your platform that can be handled with the addition of the following plugins.
Promoting your contributors
WP Biographia – This is great plugin because it adds all kinds of extra fields like social links to the user profile screen and creates a bio for each author. This way when your authors post content their bio automatically shows at the end of each of their posts and features links to their social profiles making it easy for people to connect.
WordPress does not by default allow users to upload photos so add the User Photo plugin too and then Biographia will add your contributor’s photo.
Managing the content flow
User Role Editor – WordPress defines what set roles like subscribe or contributor can do (See a list) but sometimes you may want to edit these a bit. For example an author can’t by default upload images. If you have a trusted group of authors creating content and you want them to add images to their posts, which is usually a good thing, then use the editor to grant that permission.
Editorial Calendar – This tool simply creates a monthly calendar and allows you to drag drafts to dates for automatic publishing. This is a great way to take lots of content and spread it out for consistent publishing. For managing bigger groups and creating deadlines you might also look at DivvyHQ
Keeping things secure
Adminimize – This is a pretty cool tool as it lets you strip away everything you want from the admin dashboard. You might want to hide a bunch of stuff you as the admin don’t really use, but you certainly want to take away most of what your contributors see as well. Some things are naturally hidden based on WordPress default roles, but you can really make a clean posting screen for your contributors by taking away everything you know they don’t need access to.
Every business knows they need to produce great content. By facilitating the creation of this content in a way that can benefit your clients, prospects and referral partners, you can create a platform that will start to attract more of all of the above.
View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing
Feb 6th
What makes YOU stop, read and respond to blog articles? Do you notice a pattern with articles that get re-posted and commented on the most? I do. I started this conversation here in, The Emergence and Power of Blogs, Blogging and Bloggers and wanted to continue it.

Technorati’s State of the Blogosphere 2011 report came out at the end of last year highlighting the who, what and how of blogs, blogging and bloggers. The growth of blogging the past year is significant. As the content space becomes more and more crowded, getting noticed, read and responded to will also become more challenging.
So who is blogging? Take a look:
Effective blog and article writing is indeed a craft and it does take practice. You don’t necessarily need to be a professional writer to write effective, articles that garner attention and action, but you do need to include and follow some key elements. Articles that get my attention aren’t lengthy, get to the point and are relevant to what I might need, be interested in, or simply want more information about at that very moment.
Here are 5 elements that can increase your blog opens and response:
It starts with a strong headline or title: Any professional speaker will tell you it’s not always what you say but how you say it or frame it. The rule of thumb for blog titles is a 9 word title that is descriptive, specific and useful.
It continues with providing a clear focused topic and a few specific solutions: The most opened, emailed and commented on articles offer up a number of specific how to’s, tips, lists, ways, reasons, secrets, benefits that people can digest easily, follow and use. For personal and small business blogs, a 300-500 word blog post is good, unless you determine it needs to be longer.
Follow the content story line through, then wrap it with an open ended question to invite reader interactivity: Try to have a clear path for what you want to say and how you develop and roll out the article ideas and information. You can begin with a question or statistic and support that with examples and references along with your take on the topic. You can see examples of this here on Small Business Trends and on American Express Open, The Wall Street Journal and other key news and business blogs.
Your branding and credibility definitely play into engagement: The professionals that are consistent with branding their brands in person, on social media, video, email marketing, authoring books do get more engagement, but anyone can build and grow their credibility. It takes a consistent plan of delivering relevant, solid content that helps people, offers solutions and different ways of looking at things. Be the solution and you will be seen as the solution.
Acknowledge your responders and commit to reciprocal commenting: When people take the time to read and respond to your articles, make the time to respond to them in a very simple but personal way. A thoughtful, simple reply to their comment goes a long way and shows that you actually read it. Make sure you are set up with a responder platform that is built into most key blog formats.
“Give people reasons to want to stop, read and respond to you and your articles and they will. Get to the point, be authentic, and bring value to their day.”
Really want to be brave? Include a short video so they can see you in person.
One more really important element: make sure you edit your articles for spelling and grammar before they go live, or hire a professional writer or editor to do it for you.
What are some of the things that make you stop, read and respond to a blog article?
Blog Photo via Shutterstock
5 Elements That Can Increase Your Blog Opens and Response
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Jan 25th
The Objective Of The Program Is To Help Women Generate An Extra $500 To $5,000/mo From Their Blog Using Free Traffic Sources. The Course Is Broken Down Into 8 Video Modules With All The Strategies They Need To Get Started Quickly With Internet Marketing.
The Blog Income For Women Blueprint
Jan 1st
20 Dollars Per Sale! Hugely Popular Program “guest Post Secrets” Now Available On CB! The Easiest Way To Drive Traffic To Your Blog. Perfect If You Have An Audience Of Bloggers, Article Marketers, And/or Internet Marketers!
Drive More Traffic To Your Blog With Guest Post Secrets!
Dec 15th
You’ve read all the posts about why your business should blog (like this one from Technipedia) and you’ve decided you’re on board. You get it. You want to take advantage of the SEO benefits, the added authority and the community that you’ll be able to build on your own site. You have the motivation–but you’re just lacking one small thing: the actual blog topics. That killer post idea always just seems to be just out of reach.
If you’re running low on blogging ideas, below are a few unconventional ways to create some new ones. Why not give them a try and get those blogging juices fired up?

1. Overhear Your Customers’ Conversations
For small business owners who find themselves face-to-face with their customers every day, congratulations! You have the opportunity to eavesdrop on your customers and hear first-hand their daily struggles, what they wish they knew, and what gets them really excited.
You’re there to hear Mary tell Jane that she wishes your café served a Peppermint Mocha during the holidays or that she hates that Pumpkin White Chocolate Mocha you tried this year.
You’re there when Joe tells Martha that he’d like to buy that treadmill, but he doesn’t think he’d be able to install it himself so he’ll wait.
And when you do overhear these conversations, you can address them both in your business and on your blog. Because if there’s one person who’s vocal about his fear of installing your product, you can bet there are more who aren’t being vocal. So why not write a tutorial series walking people through the process? Or create a video that shows people how to do it?
If you know people have questions, your blog is the perfect place to answer them.
(You can also “overhear” customer questions in your email or in your site logs, it’s just not quite so gossipy.)
2. Questions From Family, Friends and Outsiders
The holidays are approaching. And if you’re like me, that may mean having to go home and explain your SEO job (or whatever it is you do) to your family because they still don’t understand what it is. Instead of just tuning this conversation out, really listen to the questions they’re asking–because I bet they’re questions your audience and your customers have about you and your company, as well.
For example, maybe you’re a financial planner, and your brother-in-law wants to know how to set up an IRA. He’s asking what an IRA really is, what kinds of stocks he should invest in and how much you need to put away today to retire at 65. He’d also like to know what the risks are, if that money is tax deductible and all the different investing options available to him.
You can be sure these are all questions potential customers may have when doing research about a company to invest with. So why not create a resource section on your website and/or blog to address them? Not only are you helping answer someone else’s questions, but you’re creating a stockpile of evergreen content that you can build links to and rank for in the search engines.
3. Post a Question on Facebook and Blog the Results
Many of us feel we have nothing to blog about because we don’t have anything to say on a particular day. The well just seems dry. And that’s fine, but maybe you have a question, or a theory you want to ask people their thoughts on. Why not post that question on Facebook and then blog about the results? There’s nothing wrong with crowdsourcing content, especially if it’s good content.
4. Interview Someone
Interview series are a great way to build content for your blog because it takes the focus off your company and introduces your audience to someone you think they should know. It could be an email interview, a video interview, a podcast, whatever. Sit down with someone from your industry and ask them about their take on things, what they’re passionate about, where they see the industry moving. Then share that conversation with your audience.
Or why not interview someone from inside your community? Pick someone who you’ve noticed is a frequent commenter or who is always retweeting your content. Ask them if they’d like to be featured on your blog and find out what they do, what they’re passionate about, how they found your community and why they like engaging there. You’ll learn a lot about them and what they get from your site, and you’ll also give others incentive to get involved.
5. Publish Presentations You’ve Given
As small business owners we’re often asked to give presentations at local schools, the Chamber of Commerce or neighborhood events as a way of sharing our expertise or getting people excited about our industry. Why not share that presentation with your blog audience? Whether that means posting the actual PowerPoint presentation that you gave or simply writing about your experiences at the lecture, this gives you an opportunity to “re-use” the material you shared there, while also demonstrating your expertise to your blog readers.
As busy businesspeople, we’re always on the hunt for informative (but not terribly time-consuming) blog ideas. Getting inspiration from the life events and people around you is a great way to find out what people most want to know so you can serve it right up.
Finding Blog Inspiration in Unlikely Places
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends