Sunday, November 7, 2010

Nielsen Numbers Glitch Results in Low Traffic Numbers

When it comes to online marketing, traffic is everything. It determines what marketers pay per click, which web sites get which ads, and if traffic is low enough, it may keep a site from getting ad dollars at all.

That’s why the latest faux pas from The Nielsen Company may be bigger than it seems. On Thursday, the company sent out a note to all of its clients saying they had been undercounting traffic for the past three months.

The problem was one of long URL’s. One’s with more than 2,000 characters as a matter of fact. They found that their system wasn’t recognizing these URL’s all the time resulting in an estimated 22% decline over the prior year.

Long URL’s have become increasingly popular – just look at a Facebook URL after you’ve been moving around the site awhile. And URL’s from email and RSS feed clickthroughs can be enormous.

Nielsen says the problem will be corrected by December in time for the first reports delivered in January 2011.

A headache for everyone involved, for sure, but I’m not here to point fingers. Nielsen believes this issue happened because the Internet is changing at a pace that’s hard to keep up with. Here’s a quote from the letter:

“The extraordinary changes and complexity of how the Internet is used warrants our increased attention to help the entire industry mature with a trusted source of data.”

What everyone needs to take away here is that it’s easy to get complacent. We have systems that work so we sit back and assume they’re still working a year later. But the reality is, that through no fault of any human being, systems break because the way we move around the Internet has changed.

So take a few minutes tomorrow and look at your analytic software, compare what you’re seeing to other measuring tools to see if you can spot any glitches. Look at the clickthrough and sales reports that come in on your ad placements. Make sure your Adsense accounts are still functioning.

Don’t just assume the numbers are right. Make an appointment every few months to make sure they’re right so you can correct issues before they turn into big problems.

Related Articles

Highlight Your Blog Content and Increase Comments

One of the biggest factors for the success of a blog, is how many comments you can average per post. It's not all about what you have to say, but how other interact and leave their feedback as well. A new wordpress plugin called "Highligher", allows you to highlight any content and on a blog and leave a comment on it.

You can see the plugin in action on the screenshot below from the Highlighter.com web site. Also, congrats to the UBD team for securing such an awesome domain name... wonder what they paid for it!

The "Highlighter" wordpress plugin is free to download. In addition to leaving comments, you can also share via Facebook, Twitter and through Email. I currently have this plugin enabled on the blog for a few days for everyone to test out and see how it works. Simply highlight any text on this page and the plugin will show what options you have, which are to leave a comment or share with others. It's a pretty cool concept, but I think it would take a lot of training and awareness to get blog readers to catch on to the concept.

Once you download the Highlighter plugin, you have a lot of customization and settings which can easily be accessed through Wordpress. There is also some features for adding to your mailing lists through Aweber and other providers, managing comments and ways to change the highlight colors, look and feel. Unique Blog Designs is also running a promotion where you can win a free Apple iPad if you just blog about their latest plugin.

Download Highlighter Plugin.

Related Articles

Saturday, November 6, 2010

This Sunday You’re Invited to #Blogchat to Talk Monetizing Blogs

One of my favorite times of the week on Twitter is on Monday mornings, my time (Sunday night for many of you), when Twitter comes alive with #blogchat.

#blogchat is a hashtag on Twitter that ties together hundreds of bloggers all talking about a particular aspect of blogging for an hour or so. It starts at 8pm Central US time, and usually revolves around a specific topic and/or guest host. Bloggers exchange ideas, ask questions, and network. It’s a frenzy of activity, which can seem a little overwhelming, but once you get into the swing of it, it’s a lot of fun.

You can learn more about #BlogChat and how to participate here.

This coming Sunday/Monday (depending where in the world you’re located), I’m cohosting #blogchat and we’ll be looking at the topic, “How to Monetize Your Blog.”

I’ve got a little information prepared to share, but the hour (and I’ll probably hang out for longer) will largely be an exchange of ideas. I’m happy to answer as many questions as I can during the hour—so if you have any, do come prepared.

I’ve also promised a few people to give a bit of the backstory behind my upcoming project, @Feelgooder (which I hope to soft launch in the coming week).

Remember: it’s on at 8pm Central US time on Sunday night. So mark it in your calendar, set up a way to follow the #blogchat hashtag, and follow me on Twitter at @ProBlogger!

Related Articles

Friday, November 5, 2010

5 Reasons to Attending Blogging (and Other) Conferences

Sample Conference PicIt’s a known fact that conferences can be expensive. Not only do you have the cost of registration and travel, but also the expense of time away from your work, family and social life at home.

If you are traveling to another city for a major multi-day conference you can easily expect to spend several thousand dollars in travel costs and miss at least a week of your normal life. As great of a time as it might be, it can be hard to justify the expense when you consider an actual vacation can cost less and be far more relaxing.

Because of this, many bloggers choose to stick to their online socialization. However, as great as email, IM, comments and other forms of communication are, they are no substitute for meeting someone face-to-face

So if you tend to pass on conferences because they are too expensive (in one regard or another) or simply not valuable enough, here’s five reasons you may wish to reconsider that and maybe give going to one a (second) try.

1. Networking

Though you can do some great networking online, it can’t compete what you can do face-to-face. The ability to look someone in the eye, shake hands, have a natural conversation without the barriers of technology and enjoy a meal together are just some of the things you can’t do on the Web.

Physical networking is more “real” and memorable than virtual networking and the people you meet face-to-face are much more likely to remember you than those you’ve exchanged a few emails with. There are people I’ve met once at a conference I’ll never forget but people I talk to semi-regularly online I can barely recall.

In short, physical interaction just brings you closer to other people and lets you build stronger connections that you can take into the virtual world.

If you need any tips on how to network better at a conference, take a look at Ben Spark’s excellent post filled with such tips.

2. Information and Education

Conferences are not just about meeting new people and heavy drinking. Contrary to popular belief, conferences have sessions where people teach things they know and give others the chance to ask questions.

Attending sessions at relevant conferences is a great chance to expand your knowledge into new areas or simply get a brush up on what you should already know. It’s also a great chance to get a grasp on a new technology or idea that you haven’t had the chance to try out yet and get yourself on the cutting edge of your field.

3. Ending Isolation

Blogging, by in large, is a very solitary activity, usually done by one person alone in their home or office blogging on subjects they feel passionate about. Conference are a chance to break that isolation, see that there are other people out there who do they same thing you do, put faces to names and make human connections.

More than just networking, conferences are a reminder that you aren’t isolated that the Web is “real” and that the things we do online do have an impact in the physical world and that you are part of a community, whether you realize it or not.

Basically, if you’re experiencing a case of blogger blues, a conference may be just what you need.

4. Get New Ideas

If you feel like you’re running low on ideas for your site, a conference may be just the thing that you need. Talking with other people, getting new perspectives and seeing what outsiders have to say about your niche can give you a lot of great things to talk to on your site and may even enable you to choose topics that let you reach out to new audiences.

A conference can lead you to new paths to follow and that can make blogging exciting again, both for you and your readers.

5. They Don’t Have to Be Expensive

As true as it is that many of the bigger blog conferences can be very costly, in every sense of the word, there are many, smaller ones that probably won’t be. If you seek out smaller events closer to home, you’ll save on travel, time away and, in most cases, registration.

By staying more local, you can not only cut the cost of the event, but also meet people in your area that you may be able to form a local network with and see on a regular basis. This can help turn blogging friendships into new real-life friendships that can help you in an infinite number of ways down the road.

Bottom Line

To be clear, conferences aren’t a magic place and I don’t think bloggers should spend more time mingling and networking than they do producing good content. But that doesn’t change the fact that going to conferences regularly is not just a great chance to have some fun, but will also help make you a better blogger and help you keep your enthusiasm about your site alive.

In the end, if you’ve been shying away from conferences, it might be time to give them a shot and, if you’ve been before and didn’t enjoy it, it’s likely time to try another event.

There are just too many ways conferences can help you be a better blogger to ignore them outright and you owe it to yourself, and your readers, to see if you can take advantage of what they have to offer.

Related Articles

Thursday, November 4, 2010

How to Set Up Your First Blog the Right Way the First Time

Are you convinced you need to start a blog, but you’re overwhelmed by the setup process?

getting-started-blogging.pngIf this describes you and you’d like a little hand-holding in setting up your own blog, I’ve been secretly working with Chris Garrett on a free resource that’s designed just for you. It’s called:

Getting Started Blogging

It is a six-part course that will walk you through everything you need to know about setting up your blog the right way, the first time.

Set up your blog with good foundations

In a recent survey of ProBlogger readers, I discovered two fairly large groups of visitors with similar needs:

Group 1. Readers who were yet to start their first blog.

I was a little surprised to find this out at first, but it makes sense. Many people reading this blog are PreBloggers—they’re convinced that they need a blog, and they’re now researching how to do it.

When I drilled down into the needs and challenges of these bloggers, I found that many felt real apprehension and fear about the setup process, and wanted some hand-holding in getting started.

Group 2. Readers who had started their first blog, but had regrets about the way they’d set things up.

This group had taken action on their desire to start a blog, but they’d done it in a way that left them with regrets. Perhaps they’d made poor domain choices, hadn’t thought through platform selection, or hadn’t thought carefully about content and technical issues that hampered them as their blogs grew.

Many of this second group were reading ProBlogger as a way to research setting up their second blog in a way that was better than their first.

Getting Started Blogging

Whether you’re just starting your first blog, or you’re setting up your second, third, or fourth, you may be feeling a little overwhelmed by the options and how to do it right. Chris and I would love to walk you through the process and help you set up a blog with good foundations.

This course will walk you through six lessons:

  1. Preparation. In this lesson, you’ll get tips on naming your blog, keyword research, and domain names.
  2. Platforms. Where will your blog live, and which platform is right for you?
  3. Types of Blogs.  This class is an introduction to some of the different blogging approaches you might consider.
  4. WordPress. Here, we cover how to install and customize WordPress.
  5. Adding Killer Content to Your Blog. This lesson is an introduction to the types of content you’ll want to add to your blog.
  6. Introduction to the Pillars of ProBlogging. Once you’ve got the foundations right, I’ll walk you through four areas you’ll need to work on moving forward to build a successful blog.

Lessons contain a mix of both video content and articles. This course is completely free and is being run over at SitePoint’s courses area. And you’ll get immediate access to it all six lessons when you sign up.

We’ll send you daily reminders over the week to help you keep on track, but you can take the course at your own pace—all in one go, or over a longer period if you choose.

Interested? Sign up for Getting Started Blogging now.

Too Basic for You? Check out the ProBlogger Academy

getting-started-blogging-academyGetting Started Blogging is unashamedly for those at the beginning of their blogging journey—those who are starting their first blog.

If you’re more experienced, you’re still welcome to take the course, but you might also be interested in a new series of short courses that Chris Garrett and I are putting together at the ProBlogger Academy.

These four courses can be completed as a bundle, or you can pick and choose the topics that are most suited to your needs from the following:

  1. Creating Killer Content
  2. Boosting Your Blog Traffic
  3. Building a Community on your Blog
  4. Monetizing Your Blog

Each course will be held over a week, and will have a forum area as well as Q&A sessions with Chris and myself.

These courses are not live yet, but they will be rolled out in the coming months. You can sign up now or leave your email address to be notified of them as they go live.

Related Articles

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Are Blog Contests Still Worth Running?

I’m running a month long contest through my blog BenSpark.com. I’ve dubbed the contest SwagsGiving. I have a bunch of products that I’ve gotten over the past year from attending conferences and connecting with companies and brands. Basically I have a ton of stuff that I cannot use. How many Flip Cameras does one person need. I guess I could videotape myself from multiple angles or something at the same time but for the most part this is stuff I do not need. So I want to give it away and I want to promote my blog and get a few followers/fans/readers along the way as well.

There are so many blogs doing giveaways and contests all over the place. How do you stand out? Here are a few tips that I have towards promoting and running your contest.

Running a month long giveaway contest.

Post every day at the same time so that people know when they can start entering the contest.

Tease the prizes – Talk about what you are giving away but don’t reveal what people are going to win each day until that day. I’ve got Seagate GoFlex drives, Kodak Cameras and signed books to give away. However no one knows what day I’ll be giving those prizes away. They will be given away during the month but the contestants don’t know which day those will be given away. This gives a sense of mystery around the whole contest and gets people talking.

Use Twitter - Set up a twitter account that promotes the contest and create your own hashtag for the contest.

Buy the Domain – I posted my first SwagsGiving post and Jim Kukral asked if I had the domain name for it, I didn’t but I bought it immediately. I then linked that address to a facebook fan page that I feed with the links to the contest each day.

Invite Your Friends – Look, everyone likes to win free stuff, especially cool free stuff. Invite your friends to your new Facebook fan page for your contest.

Allow people to win more than once. It keeps them coming back and since the winners are picked randomly it is fair.

Follow up with each winner quickly. Get in touch with the winner, they will post that they won and further promote the contest.

Thank entrants each day who didn’t win. E-mail each entrant telling them that they still have a chance the next day to try again.

Set up multiple tasks to enter the contest – Tweet, sign up for your newsletter, follow you on twitter, subscribe to your blog and so forth. The main point behind the contest it to garner more followers, readers and fans.

Use Video – Make a video each day of your winner and the prize the won. Congratulate the winner, leave links to the contest and further promote the contest.

These are just some ways that I run my contests. Do you have ideas for more ways to promote the contests that you run?

Related Articles

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Fanning the Social Media Flame for Viral Exposure

image of lit match

Are you a content marketer? If so, you have a choice to make.

You can sit around and wait for your content to go viral.

You can hope you’ll get sudden bursts of traffic, hope your readers will spread the word, hope your content will catch fire.

Or you can bring your own matches and lighter fluid to set the dang thing aflame yourself.

As bloggers and content marketers, which will you choose?

Sure, sometimes the passion you have for a subject will be enough to ignite a spark and compel your audience to share your content with their network. Being able to unleash something with such conviction and power that it combusts on its own is great.

Over at my SEO consulting firm Outspoken Media, we’ve been able to do it several times.

Sometimes we post something like The Power of the Unexpected, something that goes hot without us lifting a finger. As content writers, we live for these moments.

However, they almost never happen.

What is more common is that marketers need to fan their content to help it ignite and go viral. And sometimes that means stepping in when an accidental hit shows signs of life. How do you recognize those signs to take advantage? Here are some methods we use at Outspoken Media.

Identifying the spark

You know what’s normal for your community. You know how many comments an average post gets, how many tweets, how many shares, etc.

When you start to see activity that is double/triple what you’re used to seeing, act.

For example, early on we published a post called It’s Not The Recession, You Just Suck. Almost immediately after hitting the publish button I noticed the post being retweeted and passed through social media at a velocity that dwarfed anything we had seen prior.

Once we noticed we had a spark, we jumped in to add fuel and fan it.

Adding fuel to the fire

As soon as you notice a post showing signs of life, it’s up to you to keep the momentum going.

On the social Web, that means keeping the conversation alive. Find people who are talking about your post and encourage them. Respond to comments, engage, fan the debate, and keep the conversation on a healthy note.

When we called out Robert Scoble last year for spreading misinformation, he was the first person to come and engage on our post, and he did so negatively and aggressively.

The tone he set could have killed the conversation right there and caused people to be fearful of jumping in. But we weren’t going to let that happen. Instead, we went in there to engage Robert and show the community this was just the beginning of the conversation that would ultimately take place. We made it obvious that we were still in the post listening, and that everyone who commented would be heard and responded to.

No one wants to hang out at a party that’s dead or on its way out. Its important people see you’re still there.

Another way to add fuel is to allow readers to subscribe to comments so that they’re alerted each time a new voice enters the fray. This will keep them in conversation mode. It’s good for debate, but it’s also good in terms of SEO. The more page views the post receives, the more time people spend reading comments, the more it’s going to give off positive toolbar data to the search engines and help the post appear on an Alexa hotlist.

Fanning a positive flame

So, let me fill you in on something you already know — it’s really hard to have an intelligent conversation on the Internet.

Things always start out okay. Someone chimes in to offer an intelligent opinion and then, almost before your eyes, it devolves into threats, accusations and commentary about who still lives with their mother.

While it’s 100 percent entertaining to watch people have emotional breakdowns in public, conversations that get too far off track hurt your chances of going viral.

As the owner of that community, you’re responsible for fanning the flame in the right direction. When you see personal attacks being made, it’s up to you to steer the conversation back. If you think people are going too far, moderate.

Be careful, though. Viral conversations are typically rooted in debate. So you don’t want to discourage or squash it, but do keep things productive. You need to be the adult in the room, regardless of how good it feels to throw things.

Hitting the social streets

Once you’ve helped fan the flame, hit the streets!

Make sure your piece has been properly submitted to all the right social media sites, that it’s been Stumbled, that it’s on Reddit, that niche social sites are aware of it, and that it’s hit all of the communities and blogs you know are friendly to you.

Once you complete that, look outside your bubble to find other networks that may find your content interesting. What you’re trying to do here is pull people in from other networks so they’ll go out and talk about it with their community, one that doesn’t currently follow you.

It’s great that your own readers are passionate and involved in the conversation, but you want to use the natural sparks to pick up on other readers to help grow your blog and authority.

Tipping off mainstream media

You’ve covered your bases on the social networks, now look toward news sites and blog aggregators that may be interested in the conversation happening around your post.

If you’re part of the marketing community, you want to watch aggregators like TechMeme and TweetMeme. If you have a hot social media story, you want to tip off someone at Mashable. If it’s Google or heavily tech-related, tip off TechCrunch. If it’s a broader tech story, tip off more mainstream outlets, as well.

For example, our post about what we perceived to be brandjacking by Seth Godin received coverage from Business Week. My partner Rae Hoffman’s post on Google’s Real Time Spam Problem was noted in USA Today. And my other partner Rhea Drysdale is often featured on CNN.

These don’t happen by accident. They were opportunities created by tipping off the right people at the right time. This is where having a linkerati list comes into play. It helps you know who to contact for what type of story.

Making sure the post is optimized for SEO

The final thing you want to do is properly SEO your post to capitalize on search.

Going back to our Robert Scoble example, when we saw that taking off, we went back and edited the title tag to include Robert Scoble’s name. It was a small tweak that allowed us to take advantage of Google’s freshness factor and appear in his News results.

It’s a temporary rank, but it made sure that anyone who searched for Robert Scoble that day found our post. Sometimes that’s all you’re looking to do, to help keep the momentum going and get eyes to the page. You have to build awareness.

Content marketers don’t have the luxury of sitting back and hoping something goes hot. It’s up to you to help things take on a life of their own, whether it was planned from the start or you picked up on early signs of success.

Savvy content marketers always have the matches and lighter fluid ready for when a spark presents itself.

Related Articles