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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

5 Creative Ways to Drive More Traffic to Your Blog Posts

5 Creative Ways to Drive More Traffic to Your Blog Posts

By  Kimberly Reynolds


Do you want more traffic to your blog?
Are you struggling to catch the attention of more readers?
Does this sound familiar? You write an amazing piece of content. You made sure to craft an attention-grabbing headline. You share the link on Twitter, Facebook, even Google+.
Then you wait in breathless anticipation for your share count to skyrocket. Except it doesn’t.
Never fear, in this article you’ll find fresh ideas to generate buzz and get your posts noticed.

Use a two-pronged approach with a variety of platforms and different types of media to get your post shared. Image source: iStockPhoto.


Promote Your Article Across a “Wider” Variety of Platforms

Everyone is using Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and LinkedIn to promote their content. It’s tempting to focus only on these four networks because they have popularity and community numbers on their side.
However, you get a competitive advantage when you share your content on smaller or less well-known networks. These sites often have active, focused audiences and offer less competition for attention, so your content will stand out.
Here are some examples of smaller networks:
  • Quora.com—A question/answer-based website founded by two former Facebook employees. What makes Quora unique is that all content is created, edited and organized by its user community. The user base tends to be more business- and academic-oriented.
  • Tumblr—A microblogging site that recently made headlines when Yahoo! acquired it. Its user base tends to be younger and more “hip,” making it the perfect platform to share edgier, niche-based content.
  • Empire Avenue—Part social network, part social media marketing tool, Empire Avenue uses gamification to enable users to broadcast content across all of the other social networks. The primary members of EAv are small businesses, social media professionals and bloggers.

Grab Viewer Interest With Different Types of Media

Sharing a link to your post isn’t enough to guarantee that it gets read. You need togive users a compelling reason to click your link.
Use one or more of these outside-the-box, creative methods to promote your posts with images, audio and video.

#1: Use Dubbler to Give a Short Audio Introduction

Available for iPhone and Android devices, Dubbler offers a simple way to record up to 60 seconds of audio on your phone, and then share it with other Dubbler community members.
dubbler
Dubbler brings the simplicity and fun of audio to the social world. Record your voice, add a filter or photo and share with your friends.
The app includes voice filters and lets you add a cover image.
Spark interest in your blog post and record an audio message that communicates your excitement and passion about the content in a way that text or static images can’t.
Add an image, enter your blog post URL in the description and you’ve got a ready-made sound bite that can be shared with the Dubbler community, as well as Facebook and Twitter.
link on post
Add a link to your blog post. Record your teaser audio and share.

#2: Create a 6-Second Preview of Your Post with Vine

Vine is an iPhone app that lets you create 6-second looping video shorts. A Vine video is a great way to give viewers a 6-second teaser about the blog post contents.
For example, this bicycle blog created a short Vine of one of their bikes and tweeted it with a link to their blog post about its features and availability.
Here is an example with the blog post URL in the video description:
Vine has an active and growing community to share with. Additionally, you can alsoshare to Twitter and Facebook.
Since Vine is owned by Twitter, your video will display automatically when you tweet it, as well as provide a link to the blog post and specific hashtags.
There’s another benefit of using Vine. Tweets with Vine videos are four times more likely to be shared than standard video, according to research by Unruly.

#3: Create a SlideShare Overview of Your Post

SlideShare is more than a just a content-sharing platform.
With 51.6 million monthly visitors, SlideShare is a thriving community with five times as much traffic from business owners than Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn.
A presentation by Pam Moore, the Marketing Nut, demonstrates the cross-promotional opportunities between SlideShare and her blog. In this example, Pam created an overview of her blog post with the slides and then included a link back to her post in one of the presentation slides.
At the end of her post, she embedded the presentation, which links back to SlideShare and more of her content.
pam moore link
Pam put her links at the end of her presentation on her closing slide.
Your finished presentation will be visible and searchable from within SlideShare and you can extend its reach and share it to Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Pinterest and LinkedIn.

#4: Pin Your Post to a Pinterest Group Board

Pinterest allows you to pin on individual boards and collaborate by pinning tocontributor boards. The benefit of pinning to a contributor board is increased exposure. When you pin to a contributor board, your fellow contributors see the pin and so do their followers. The more members and followers a group board has, the more people will see your pin.
Here are some tips for pinning your post to Pinterest:
  • Choose an interesting image from your blog post to pin
  • Make sure the title of your blog post is visible on the image you choose
  • Add keywords to the description
  • Use hashtags, if they’re relevant
  • If you mention someone in your blog post, you can @ mention them on Pinterest, too
  • Pinterest will add the URL to your blog post
    blog post on pinterest
    A great way to increase exposure for your blog post.

#5: Instagram an Image From Your Post

Instagram has a constantly updating feed of images that is viewed by over 100 million monthly users. Sharing your main blog image, overlaid with the post title, is a great way to drive organic traffic to your blog. You can leverage the sheer volume of Instagram traffic by using the same blog post image that you shared to Pinterest. Instagram is also very hashtag-friendly! Here’s an easy way to post your picture to the Instagram community and beyond:
  • Save your blog image to Dropbox
  • Access Dropbox from your mobile device
  • Upload the image to Instagram
  • Add any relevant hashtags and the URL of your blog post to the caption, usingBitly to shorten and track click-throughs
  • Be sure to @ mention anyone you referred to in your post
  • Remember to share your Instagram image to Tumblr, Facebook, Flickr, Twitter, and Foursquare
Pro Tip: Twitter no longer displays the actual Instagram. Instead, it links to the image. You can use IFTTT to circumvent this issue. Here’s the recipe and here’s what the tweet will look like using IFTTT.
Get Creative When Promoting Your Blog Posts
There are many other creative ways to promote your blog post. Don’t be afraid to try something new!
Just because no one else is doing it doesn’t mean it’s not a good idea. Some tactics will resonate with your readers. Some will not. And that’s ok. The important thing is to keep innovating.
What do you think? Have you used any of these creative alternatives? Do you have another, outside-the-box idea for promoting your blog posts? Please let me know your suggestions in the comments below.



Source: http://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/5-creative-ways-to-drive-more-traffic-to-your-blog-posts/


Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Get More Followers!


So let’s say you want more Twitter followers than the number you have now.


That makes sense! Wanting more Twitter followers is just a new-ish way of wanting more people to like you, and that’s mostly what there is to life: hoping more people like you. (A warning: I’m not convinced this is a desire that can be met! You’ll see people with 90,000 followers asking those 90,000 followers to help them get to 100,000 followers, and that’s when, if you are paying attention, you’ll realize you cannot win.)
So first you have to remember that not everyone likes you and some people never will and all you can really do about that is cry if you want to. And then you can consider trying these things, which might or might not help, but which have to be better ideas than telling you to hashtag everything or participate in #teamfollowback.

1. Have a voice.


There is something very cheesy about telling someone to be himself, but it must also be important and true or else it wouldn’t come up so often. There’s something that makes you YOU, and if you want Twitter followers who care about you/your life, you’ll be that thing as much as possible. Sound like a human, is what I mean.
Haha. OK, Lady Gaga.
Source: google.com

2. Follow people who might reasonably want to follow you back.


You should follow whomever you want, obviously, and you should never, ever, ever ask someone you just followed to follow you back, BUT! You ARE more likely to increase your follower count if some of the people you’re following have some sort of connection to you that might make them interested in following you back.
Ugh, coworkers SHOULD follow each other back…right?

3. Interact without being a pest.


Getting someone to notice you can be tough, especially since Twitter no longer sends out emails for each new follower. (My inbox feels so empty.) Do tweet at people you like, and favorite or RT their stuff when you really like it. Just don’t be annoying. If you’re responding to everything they say for attention, they’re more likely to block than follow back. And no one likes it when you try to one-up a joke with a cleverer response.
This is the way to every man’s heart.

4. Promote the people you like without expecting anything in return.


Because it’s not just about getting them to follow you. People appreciate it when you spread their words and links because you genuinely think other people will enjoy them. Over time, you’ll develop a reputation for being kind and generous, which will likely have an effect on your follower account. Acting entitled, however, or offering to retweet someone as part of an exchange just makes you look like a douche.
Source: google.com

5. Know the difference between sharing your work and annoying self-promotion.


A good idea is linking your followers to a blog post you wrote. A bad idea is retweeting another person linking to your blog post and talking about how amazing you are. No one wants to follow someone who is endlessly trying to make a name for himself or herself. As in real life, you don’t become popular by shouting, “HEY, LOOK HOW POPULAR I AM” at anyone who passes by.
:-/

6. Share links/news with a view attached.


If you’re going to use your Twitter account to share links to things you’ve read, do so with a clearly expressed view attached. Anyone can link to a story and write “Interesting read” before the RT — taking “a side” makes it more likely that someone reading the same thing will really agree or really disagree with what you’ve written, and people like following people with whom they really agree (or really disagree!).
Do read @kimserverson's exquisite tutorial on the political South, including a weeping Mark Sanford nyti.ms/WEcaKV #imontheappitrail

7. Be timely without being trite.


People respond well to tweets about breaking news, current events, and what happened on Catfish last night. But be aware: A huge amount of other people are also tweeting about these things. While it’s good to keep your Twitter account relevant, make sure you’re not just going for the obvious joke that 500 people made before you even woke up.
Related.

8. Live-tweet the events everyone watches.


Believe it or not, live-tweeting can easily get you followers. But there are some caveats! Again, you have to make sure what you’re saying is interesting and unique — anyone can report on what they’re seeing, but only the best live-tweeters make observations that are LOLworthy and retweetable. Also, you don’t need to live-tweet everything. The major events (the Oscars, the Super Bowl) should suffice.
(Say something besides this, though, probably.)
Source: google.com

9. Care just enough, but don’t obsess.


This is more about maintaining your sanity than it is about getting followers. Remember, it’s just Twitter. At the same time, obsessing over your follower count can drag it down, especially if you let that show through your tweets. (Complaining about not having more followers is never a good look.) Also, when you obsess, you’re more likely to tweet dumb things out of obligation. It’s OK to just step away from the computer sometimes!
So this was the text I woke up to from my little brother...for some reason he thinks I have Justin's number LOL pic.twitter.com/1kVyLl5AAG

10. Be nice, dick.


This is the most important advice of all. And guess what — it doesn’t just apply to Twitter! A lot of people seem to think that snark is the way to internet fame, and it really, really isn’t. First of all, there is always going to be someone meaner and funnier than you out there. Second of all, no one likes an asshole. Oh, sure, they might keep you around for a while, but at the end of the day, kindness prevails. Your Twitter followers will be with you for the long haul, and they’ll spread the love around.
Uhhh.

In truth, there are probably only two ways to get a lot of Twitter followers: Be really good, or be really, famously bad.


And there’s one more way, but it doesn’t count, because the third way to get a lot of Twitter followers is to buy them. But if you buy them, you are not buying “followers” so much as you are “pieces of cold and empty internet space” with egg faces who have nothing to say and no capacity to read. And wouldn’t that make you feel odd, when you really think about it? Buying all these fake eggs. Sometimes I just don’t think we’re thinking about it, any of it, at all. (Though now I’m imagining lying on a bed or maybe in a little inflatable pool with hundreds or thousands of hard-boiled eggs taken out of the refrigerator all around me, and in my head it seems nice. A new way to cool off in the summertime. But you would have to be careful when you got up, and maybe it would feel wrong to eat them later.)

Source: http://www.buzzfeed.com/katieheaney/how-to-actually-get-more-twitter-followers