Showing posts with label passion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label passion. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 May 2017

Blog Post Ideas: Maximize Your Reach with the Right Topics - Whiteboard Friday

With the ubiquity of blogs, one of the questions we hear the most is how to come up with the right topics for new posts. In today's episode of Whiteboard Friday, Rand explores six different paths to great blog topic ideas, and tells you what you need to keep in mind before you start.
Blog post ideas
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Video transcription

Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week, we're going to chat about blog post ideas, how to have great ones, how to make sure that the topics that you're covering on your blog actually accomplish the goals that you want, and how to not run out of ideas as well.

The goals of your blog

So let's start with the goals of a blog and then what an individual post needs to do, and then I'll walk you through kind of six formats for coming up with great ideas for what to blog about. But generally speaking, you have created a blog, either on your company's website or your personal website or for the project that you're working on, because you want to:
  • Attract a certain audience, which is great.
  • Capture the attention and amplification, the sharing of certain types of influencers, so that you can grow that audience.
  • Rank highly in search engines. That's not just necessarily a goal for the blog's content itself. But one of the reasons that you started a blog is to grow the authority, the ranking signals, the ability to rank for the website as a whole, and the blog hopefully is helping with that.
  • Inspire some trust, some likeability, loyalty, and maybe even some evangelism from your readers.
  • Provide a reference point for their opinions. So if you are a writer, an author, a journalist, a contributor to all sorts of sources, a speaker, whatever it is, you're trying to provide a home for your ideas and your content, potentially your opinions too.
  • Covert our audience to take an action. Then, finally, many times a blog is crafted with the idea that it is a first step in capturing an audience that will then take an action. That could be buy something from you, sign up for an email list, potentially take a free trial of something, maybe take some action. A political blog might be about, "Call your Congress person." But those types of actions.

What should an individual post do?

From there, we get into an individual post. An individual post is supposed to help with these goals, but on its own doesn't do all of them. It certainly doesn't need to do more than one at a time. It can hopefully do some. But one of those is, generally speaking, a great blog post will do one of these four things and hopefully two or even three.
I. Help readers to accomplish a goal that they have.

So if I'm trying to figure out which hybrid electric vehicle should I buy and I read a great blog post from someone who's very, very knowledgeable in the field, and they have two or three recommendations to help me narrow down my search, that is wonderful. It helps me accomplish my goal of figuring out which hybrid car to buy. That accomplishment of goal, that helping of people hits a bunch of these very, very nicely.
II. Designed to inform people and/or entertain them.

So it doesn't have to be purely informational. It doesn't have to be purely entertainment, but some combination of those, or one of the two, about a particular topic. So you might be trying to make someone excited about something or give them knowledge around it. It may be knowledge that they didn't previously know that they wanted, and they may not actually be trying to accomplish a goal, but they are interested in the information or interested in finding the humor.
III. Inspiring some amplification and linking.

So you're trying to earn signals to your site that will help you rank in search engines, that will help you grow your audience, that will help you reach more influencers. Thus, inspiring that amplification behavior by creating content that is designed to be shared, designed to be referenced and linked to is another big goal.
IV. Creating a more positive association with the brand.

So you might have a post that doesn't really do any of these things. Maybe it touches a little on informational or entertaining. But it is really about crafting a personal story, or sharing an experience that then draws the reader closer to you and creates that association of what we talked about up here -- loyalty, trust, evangelism, likeability.

6 paths to great blog topic ideas

So knowing what our blog needs to do and what our individual posts are trying to do, what are some great ways that we can come up with the ideas, the actual topics that we should be covering? I have kind of six paths. These six paths actually cover almost everything you will read in every other article about how to come up with blog post ideas. But I think that's what's great. These frameworks will get you into the mindset that will lead you to the path that can give you an infinite number of blog post ideas.

1. Are there any unanswered or poorly answered questions that are in your field, that your audience already has/is asking, and do you have a way to provide great answers to those?


So that's basically this process of I'm going to research my audience through a bunch of methodologies, going to come up with topics that I know I could cover. I could deliver something that would answer their preexisting questions, and I could come up with those through...
  • Surveys of my readers.
  • In-person meetings or emails or interviews.
  • Informal conversations just in passing around events, or if I'm interacting with members of my audience in any way, social settings.
  • Keyword research, especially questions.
So if you're using a tool like Moz's Keyword Explorer, or I think some of the other ones out there, Ahrefs might have this as well, where you can filter by only questions. There are also free tools like Answer the Public, which many folks like, that show you what people are typing into Google, specifically in the form of questions, "Who? What? When? Where? Why? How? Do?" etc.
So I'm not just going to walk you through the ideas. I'm also going to challenge myself to give you some examples. So I've got two -- one less challenging, one much more challenging. Two websites, both have blogs, and coming up with topic ideas based on this.
So one is called Remoters. It's remoters.net. It's run by Aleyda Solis, who many of you in the SEO world might know. They talk about remote work, so people who are working remotely. It's a content platform for them and a service for them. Then, the second one is a company, I think, called Schweiss Doors. They run hydraulicdoors.com. Very B2B. Very, very niche. Pretty challenging to come up with good blog topics, but I think we've got some.
Remote Worker: I might say here, "You know what? One of the questions that's asked very often by remote workers, but is not well-answered on the internet yet is: 'How do I conduct myself in a remote interview and present myself as a remote worker in a way that I can be competitive with people who are actually, physically on premises and in the room? That is a big challenge. I feel like I'm always losing out to them. Remote workers, it seems, don't get the benefits of being there in person.'" So a piece of content on how to sell yourself on a remote interview or as a remote worker could work great here.
Hydraulic doors: One of the big things that I see many people asking about online, both in forums which actually rank well for it, the questions that are asked in forums around this do rank around costs and prices for hydraulic doors. Therefore, I think this is something that many companies are uncomfortable answering right online. But if you can be transparent where no one else can, I think these Schweiss Doors guys have a shot at doing really well with that. So how much do hydraulic doors cost versus alternatives? There you go.

2. Do you have access to unique types of assets that other people don't?

That could be research. It could be data. It could be insights. It might be stories or narratives, experiences that can help you stand out in a topic area. This is a great way to come up with blog post content. So basically, the idea is you could say, "Gosh, for our quarterly internal report, we had to prepare some data on the state of the market. Actually, some of that data, if we got permission to share it, would be fascinating."
We can see through keyword research that people are talking about this or querying Google for it already. So we're going to transform it into a piece of blog content, and we're going to delight many, many people, except for maybe this guy. He seems unhappy about it. I don't know what his problem is. We won't worry about him. Wait. I can fix it. Look at that. So happy. Ignore that he kind of looks like the Joker now.
We can get these through a bunch of methodologies:
  • Research, so statistical research, quantitative research.
  • Crowdsourcing. That could be through audiences that you've already got through email or Facebook or Twitter or LinkedIn.
  • Insider interviews, interviews with people on your sales team or your product team or your marketing team, people in your industry, buyers of yours.
  • Proprietary data, like what you've collected for your internal annual reports.
  • Curation of public data. So if there's stuff out there on the web and it just needs to be publicly curated, you can figure out what that is. You can visit all those websites. You could use an extraction tool, or you could manually extract that data, or you could pay an intern to go extract that data for you, and then synthesize that in a useful way.
  • Multimedia talent. Maybe you have someone, like we happen to here at Moz, who has great talent with video production, or with audio production, or with design of visuals or photography, or whatever that might be in the multimedia realm that you could do.
  • Special access to people or information, or experiences that no one else does and you can present that.
Those assets can become the topic of great content that can turn into really great blog posts and great post ideas.
Remote Workers: They might say, "Well, gosh, we have access to data on the destinations people go and the budgets that they have around those destinations when they're staying and working remotely, because of how our service interacts with them. Therefore, we can craft things like the most and least expensive places to work remotely on the planet," which is very cool. That's content that a lot of people are very interested in.
Hydraulic doors: We can look at, "Hey, you know what? We actually have a visual overlay tool that helps an architect or a building owner visualize what it will look like if a hydraulic door were put into place. We can go use that in our downtime to come up with we can see how notable locations in the city might look with hydraulic doors or notable locations around the world. We could potentially even create a tool, where you could upload your own visual, photograph, and then see how the hydraulic door looked on there." So now we can create images that will help you share.

3. Relating a personal experience or passion to your topic in a resonant way.


I like this and I think that many personal bloggers use it well. I think far too few business bloggers do, but it can be quite powerful, and we've used it here at Moz, which is relating a personal experience you have or a passion to your topic in some way that resonates. So, for example, you have an interaction that is very complex, very nuanced, very passionate, perhaps even very angry. From that experience, you can craft a compelling story and a headline that draws people in, that creates intrigue and that describes something with an amount of emotion that is resonant, that makes them want to connect with it. Because of that, you can inspire people to further connect with the brand and potentially to inform and entertain.
There's a lot of value from that. Usually, it comes from your own personal creativity around experiences that you've had. I say "you," you, the writer or the author, but it could be anyone in your organization too. Some resources I really like for that are:
  • Photos. Especially, if you are someone who photographs a reasonable portion of your life on your mobile device, that can help inspire you to remember things.
  • A journal can also do the same thing.
  • Conversations that you have can do that, conversations in person, over email, on social media.
  • Travel. I think any time you are outside your comfort zone, that tends to be those unique things.
Remote workers: I visited an artist collective in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and I realized that, "My gosh, one of the most frustrating parts of remote work is that if you're not just about remote working with a laptop and your brain, you're almost removed from the experience. How can you do remote work if you require specialized equipment?" But in fact, there are ways. There are maker labs and artist labs in cities all over the planet at this point. So I think this is a topic that potentially hasn't been well-covered, has a lot of interest, and that personal experience that I, the writer, had could dig into that.
Hydraulic doors: So I've had some conversations with do-it-yourselfers, people who are very, very passionate about DIY stuff. It turns out, hydraulic doors, this is not a thing that most DIYers can do. In fact, this is a very, very dramatic investment. That is an intense type of project. Ninety-nine percent of DIYers will not do it, but it turns out there's actually search volume for this.
People do want to, or at least want to learn how to, DIY their own hydraulic doors. One of my favorite things, after realizing this, I searched, and then I found that Schweiss Doors actually created a product where they will ship you a DIY kit to build your own hydraulic door. So they did recognize this need. I thought that was very, very impressive. They didn't just create a blog post for it. They even served it with a product. Super-impressive.

4. Covering a topic that is "hot" in your field or trending in your field or in the news or on other blogs.


The great part about this is it builds in the amplification piece. Because you're talking about something that other people are already talking about and potentially you're writing about what they've written about, you are including an element of pre-built-in amplification. Because if I write about what Darren Rowse at ProBlogger has written about last week, or what Danny Sullivan wrote about on Search Engine Land two weeks ago, now it's not just my audience that I can reach, but it's theirs as well. Potentially, they have some incentive to check out what I've written about them and share that.
So I could see that someone potentially maybe posted something very interesting or inflammatory, or wrong, or really right on Twitter, and then I could say, "Oh, I agree with that," or, "disagree," or, "I have nuance," or, "I have some exceptions to that." Or, "Actually, I think that's an interesting conversation to which I can add even more value," and then I create content from that. Certainly, social networks like:
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Forums
  • Subreddits. I really like Pocket for this, where I'll save a bunch of articles, and then I'll see which one might be very interesting to cover or write about in the future. News aggregators are great for this too. So that could be a Techmeme in the technology space, or a Memeorandum in the political space, or many others.
Remote workers: You might note, well, health care, last week in the United States and for many months now, has been very hot in the political arena. So for remoters, that is a big problem and a big question, because if your health insurance is tied to your employer again, as it was before the American Care Act, then you could be in real trouble. Then you might have a lot of problems and challenges. So what does the politics of health care mean for remote workers? Great. Now, you've created a real connection, and that could be something that other outlets would cover and that people who've written about health care might be willing to link to your piece.
Hydraulic doors: One of the things that you might note is that Eater, which is a big blog in the restaurant space, has written about indoor and outdoor space trends in the restaurant industry. So you could, with the data that you've got and the hydraulic doors that you provide, which are very, very common, well moderately common, at least in the restaurant indoor/outdoor seating space, potentially cover that. That's a great way to tie in your audience and Eater's audience into something that's interesting. Eater might be willing to cover that and link to you and talk about it, etc.
The last two, I'm not going to go too into depth, because they're a little more basic.

5. Pure keyword research-driven.

So this is using Google AdWords or keywordtool.io, or Moz's Keyword Explorer, or any of the other keyword research tools that you like to figure out: What are people searching for around my topic? Can I cover it? Can I make great content there?

6. Readers who care about my topics also care about ______________?

Essentially taking any of these topics, but applying one level of abstraction. What I mean by that is there are people who care about your topic, but also there's an overlap of people who care about this other topic and who also care about yours.
hydraulic doors: People who care about restaurant building trends and hydraulic doors has a considerable overlap, and that is quite interesting.
Remote workers: It could be something like, "I care about remote work. I also care about the gear that I use, my laptop and my bag, and those kinds of things." So gear trends could be a very interesting intersect. Then, you can apply any of these other four processes, five processes onto that intersection or one level of an abstraction. 

All right, everyone. We have done a tremendous amount here to cover a lot about blog topics. But I think you will have some great ideas from this, and I look forward to hearing about other processes that you've got in the comments. Hopefully, we'll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care. 

https://moz.com/blog/blog-post-ideas-whiteboard-friday 

Monday, 15 May 2017

How To Start A Successful Blog In 7 Easy Steps


Are you looking to start a blog? Ready to dive into the world of blogging, but not sure where to begin?

Believe me, I get it. Back when I started my first blog in 2004 I felt lost. There was no roadmap or getting started guide. I was blindly swatting at flies hoping to get it right.
I wondered…
  • what should I write about
  • how do I find topic ideas, and
  • what blog platform should I even use?
But times have changed. Today, starting a blog isn’t time-consuming or difficult.

And if you’re wondering if blogging is right for you, don’t worry!
Blogging is for anyone interested in extending, launching, or reinventing a brand.

If you want to build awareness and authority, read on for a step by step to starting a successful blog!

How to Start a Successful Blog in 7 Easy Steps

  STEP 1. Find Your Topic and Perfect Niche

A. Do Your Research

If you want to create a blog people flock to, you need to begin with research.

Getting a clear understanding of what your blog is about, who you’re writing for, and what type of content you create will make the “getting started part” a whole lot easier.

To get an idea of what you’re looking for within this research, let’s imagine you’re a health and fitness blogger.

You write about exercise, nutrition, weight management, and behavioral change.

We’re going to take those phrases and head over to Google Keyword Planner. Here you’re searching for two things:

  1. Niche specific keyword options
  2. The competitiveness of those keywords

For example, take the phrase “weight management.” When I add that in, here’s what I see.


What you want to identify is the volume for that niche. No sense in tackling a niche if there’s no one interested, right?
Your next step is to look at what people (your target audience) are searching for.

You want to know what words they’re using and how they actually search. That’s where Google predictive results come in.
I’m sure you’ve seen this at work. As soon as you begin to type, Google will predict what you’re looking for.

These predictive results are a great place to see what others are looking to know, learn, and better understand.


As Nichehacks.com suggests, the best niches are evergreen niches that already have:
  • A proven track record
  • High demand
  • Lots of easy to find customers online
  • Endless products on sale
  • Lots of websites, social media groups and forums
  • Competition

 

B. Know the Purpose of Your Blog


Have you determined what you want to get out of blogging? Start here before you begin your blog.
What are you trying to achieve?
  • Authority: create content around a singular focus or topic?
  • Credibility: build a reputation within in your industry?
  • Thought Leadership: drive market decisions by anticipating needs?
  • Motivational: excite, inspire, and lead your audience?
  • Legacy: design content that leaves an indelible mark on your industry, audience, and community?

 

C. Merge Passion with Profit


Tie your purpose with passion to create a viable blog. Find your passion by answering these questions:
  • What top 5 topics would you write about if time and money weren’t a factor?
  • What about those topics excites you?
  • Can you put a new spin on that topic and make it unique?
  • Can you clearly articulate a benefit around the topic?
  • Is there an audience for your topic?
  • Is it a sustainable topic?
  • What topic could you write about over and over without it ever feeling stale?

 

D. Get to Know Your Niche


Successful bloggers know that understanding who you’re speaking with is the first key to success.
You don’t need to be an expert right out of the gate, but you do need to understand what your audience wants.
To create a successful blog, here’s 3 things you’ll need:
  • Actionable advice to solve everyday problems
  • Proven methods that make your solution easier, better, and more justifiable than the competition
  • A passion for that community (money will come when passion is the fuel that keeps your blogging fire lit!)

 

A Quick Recap

PURPOSE: What’s the purpose of your blog? Top options are:
  • Authority
  • Credibility
  • Thought Leadership
  • Motivational
  • Legacy
PASSION: Write down 5 topics you’d write about if time and money weren’t a factor.
ORIGINALITY: Share your original solutions to current market problems

  STEP 2. Choose a Domain


Choosing your domain might feel like an afterthought, but it’s a crucial piece to your new blog.
As you embark on this journey, let me share three important things for you to consider.
You’ll take these answers and incorporate them with your keyword research into your domain name.

 

Tips for Your Domain Name

 

  1. Keep it short – Make it easy to remember, recite, and type with 2-3 words at the most.
  2. Keep it Relevant – Your domain must tell the story of who your company, industry, or niche is. Be very clear in what you do. And if you’re a local business, you might consider adding it to your domain. For example: A dentist in the Phoenix area might choose, “phoenixdental.com”
  3. Make it Memorable – What about you or your company is unusual, striking or extraordinary? What do you do that nobody else can? Memorable is instantly recognizable and that’s what you’re shooting for.

Wondering where to begin your search?
Here’s a few free and simple to use tools to get started.

Domainr and Namemesh

If you’re stuck on the right name for your business, try a domain name generator. Tools like Domainr (that’s domainr.com) and Namemesh.com let you add in your own words.

I’ve stuck with our example of “weight management” and added that to Namemesh.

What you’ll find is a huge list of ideas. Some will be relevant, some won’t. I particularly love Weight Dentist and Weight Attorney. 
😀

Write down any relevant variations. Then go take a look and see if that domain is available.

 

Thesaurus


If you need variations of a word, head over to Thesaurus.com. I know this sounds like a simplified solution, but wow do I love this tool. In fact, it’s one of my go-to’s daily.

To use it for domain research, head over to Thesauras.com and type in the words that describe your business. We’ll use the “weight management” example from above.

Now let’s think about the true intent of weight management. What do people really want to do? Manage their weight, right?
So let’s use the word “manage” to see what we come up with.


Your target market more than likely wants to maintain, regulate, or take care of a few extra pounds. Consider all of these words dependent on the focus of your blog and content.

CoolNameIdeas


If your brand or business name is already taken, use a tool like CoolNameIdeas.com to add words to the beginning or end of your domain.

You can do this yourself by adding something relevant to create a phrase. For example, if your company name is “Amy’s Designs,” add another word that tells the same story – for example “theamydesigns” or “amydesignsco.”

As you can see, the essence of your brand still remains and you keep it short and simple.

A Quick Recap:


SHORT: First, keep it short. Think of your favorite brands:
  • Starbucks
  • Audi
  • Apple

Ok, maybe those are mine, but still… they make a point. Make sure your domain is short, and easy to remember with 2-3 words at the most.

RELEVANT: Your domain must align with your business name, vision, and story.

MEMORABLE: Share what’s unusual, striking or extraordinary about your business.

   STEP 3. Set Up Your Blog


Hosting is your first big decision once you’ve landed on a domain name. It affects the speed, reliability, and professional appearance of your blog.

While there’s hundreds of options to choose from, I personally recommend Hostgator.

They’re simple to set up and integrated with top platforms like WordPress. Plus, you don’t need to be a techie or a developer to get started.

Your content management system is equally important. Because of that, I only recommend WordPress.

WordPress has two versions, WordPress.org and WordPress.com. WordPress.org is the one I recommend.

With it, you’ll use your own branded domain and have complete control over the design and functionality of your blog.

Here’s how to get it set up with Hostgator:

 

 STEP 4. Create Your Content Strategy


No matter your niche, you’ll need to focus on delivering educational and informative content.

Sure, GIF’s and Memes are popular, but is that really what you want to be known for? Probably not.

Instead, elevate the conversation around your business.
What struggle is your audience facing and what unique insight do you have to solve that issue?

Anyone can Google and find an answer. Heck, I just Googled “how to know your niche” and came away with over 5 million results.
That’s a lot of reading if I’m searching for the right answer.

Your job is to understand what appeals to your audience and then deliver consistently.

Sure, this might sound like an incredible amount of hard work to you. And I won’t lie.  Creating quality content is a commitment. But, it doesn’t have to be difficult or scary.

And the benefits far outweigh the amount of time put in.
You’ll build rapport with visitors, get the opportunity to convert them into contacts, and then have built the trust to turn them into lifelong customers.

Take the steps below to get started with your content strategy.

A. Get to Know Your Target Market


Start by identifying how you’ll WIN by knowing your: Who, Issues, and Needs
  • Who: Who will you be talking with on your blog? List your target market. Mine for example is small business owners, entrepreneurs, and marketers.
  • Issues: What issues is your target market dealing with? Mine would be finding enough time to manage social media, juggling a business online and offline, budget, conversion, results.
  • Needs: What are the needs of your target market? This is where you’ll start to identify opportunity. What problems can you solve and what solutions will you provide?

 

B. Identify the Type of Content You’ll Write


What content do you currently have in place and what will you produce? To become a content marketing powerhouse, you have to write SHARE WORTHY content!

  1.  Content That Educates

This is the number one content marketing choice for most B2B and B2C businesses.

Have a long sales cycle? Educational content can walk your prospects through the consideration process.

Share content that helps your readers evaluate their options. It should also elevate the experience around your business.

  1. Content That Entertains

People love entertainment. From Gifs to Memes, this type of content is heavily shared across social media.

It usually involves videos, comic strips, images and webisodes. It’s entertaining and visually appealing. It likable, shareable, and often the most engaging content on social media.

  1.  Utility Content

Utility content helps your audience accomplish certain tasks, and make the right decisions. This type of content does not tell stories – it gives users tools to get from point A to B.

Utility content is exactly what the user needs to make an educated and informed decision.

So, which type of content sounds most appealing to your audience?
Your goal is to choose one and create a unique piece of content that you’ll share with your audience.

C. Create a Content Calendar


The key to every successful blog is consistency. Determine how often you’ll post and what days of the week you’ll publish new articles.

An editorial calendar will keep you focused on your topic and posting on a regular schedule.

Create a calendar and map out specific topics like:
  • Company milestones
  • Upcoming events
  • Hot topics
  • Industry news
  • Core values
Don’t want to build it out on your own? Grab a copy of our free calendar template.

 

 5. Network Through Blog Platforms


A big part of blog success is based on the relationships you create. One of the best ways to gain visibility is through blog promotional platforms.

The idea is to join groups that have created Tribes of individuals who share the same interests. This means you’re making targeted connections, as opposed to a scattershot approach.

While blasting your content to as many people as possible might sound like a solid plan, don’t do it.

Put your content in the hands of people who care about your topic.
Pick a handful of websites, Facebook Groups, and online forums designed to connect like-minded bloggers. Here’s how I use one of my favorite tools to build awareness and authority.

Triberr

Tribber is a simple to use tool designed to connect bloggers with similar content creators. The key to success (as with any of these tools) is reciprocation.

You add your blog content and then share other people’s content your audience will enjoy.
To get started:
  • Create your account – you can connect via Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn or create a login and password.
  • Connect your blog – you can do this through RSS or if you’re using WordPress, download the Triberr plugin to automatically add your blog post.
  • Join tribes – find tribes relevant to your industry or niche.
  • Accept tribe invites – you’ll also begin to receive invites to tribes. Accept those that make sense to the type of content you share.

Take 5 minutes each day to find content, share it to Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn, and begin a conversation as people share.

 

Additional Blog Platform Options:

  

6. Promote Your Blog Content


When it comes to promotion, you have multiple options. But when you’re new to blogging, the cost effective ideas are the best.
Especially when they’re also going to give you the biggest results for your time.

Over the years, I’ve tweaked my promotional strategy to find the perfect mix.

Each one will help you increase conversation, shares, and traffic around your new site.

A. Influencer Outreach


Influencers are one of the most powerful marketing weapon you’ll ever wield.

By joining forces with an influencer, someone with similar goal to yours, you gain their reach, which you can leverage to promote your blog post.

Find influencers who have the right balance of reach and engagement. 

Tell them what you appreciate about their content and why you’d like to partner.

I find that the genuine approach is relatable and something most will respond to.

B. Social Network Specific


Twitter Cards
With Twitter Cards, you can attach rich photos, videos and media experience to Tweets and drive traffic to your website.
Add a few lines of HTML to your webpage, and users who Tweet links to your content will have a “Card” added to the tweet.
Pinterest Article Cards (Rich Pins)
Pinterest Article Cards can dramatically improve the interest and click-through rate on your article pins.
Your care will include the title, author’s name, description and story link, right on the pin.
Click to Tweet (CTT)
Embed a click-to-tweet in your blog post and make it easier for the reader to share your blog on Twitter.
Here’s what one looks like:

C. Bookmarking and Promotion Tools

  

7. Start an Email List Now


This final tip is one I can’t stress enough. Too many newbie bloggers make the mistake of forgetting about list building until years later.
While you can’t turn back time, you can always get started today.
Use tools like Constant Contact, AWeber and my personal favorite, Convert Kit. Then pair that with WordPress plugins to create forms and build a targeted blog list.

 

Final Thoughts on Starting a Successful Blog


Successful blogs aren’t born overnight. They take time and consistency.

So be patient and write. Then write again, and again, and again.
The more you write, hit that publish button, and stay focused on your cause… the quicker you lose the jitters, build in solid writing habits, and draw an audience eager to read your content.

https://rebekahradice.com/start-a-successful-blog-in-7-easy-steps/