Archive for August, 2010

Top 10 Ways To Make Money With Twitter In 2010

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010
#1   Sponsored Tweets   Earn $2 Per Tweet – This is an online marketplace that allows you to connect directly
with advertisers to engage in sponsored conversations through Twitter.
Advertisers compensate you with cash in exchange for a sponsored tweet.

#2     Tweetadder – Find and Engage in Like-Minded Twitter Followers & Automate Twitter Posts! 100% Free download, this is a must have!

#3   Tweetomatic Profiteer   Tweetomatic Profiteer
– If you don’t already know how to go from zero to 1,000’s of targeted
traffic in under 1 week, on 100% autopilot without paying a dime, and
convert it into instant profit any time you like…

#4   Tweet Tank   Tweet Tank – Eight videos that show you exactly how to start making
money using twitter right now. Simple to set up and very small work involved.

#5   Turbo Twitter Cash   Turbo Cash Generator – This is a groundbreaking new plug-and-play software
that makes multiple streams of income using twitter. Once these are
set up it's nearly a fully automated system sending you money like a
machine.

#6   Army of Followers   Army
of Followers
– Build an army of thousands of followers to
make money with twitter. They teach you how to
turn Twitter into a traffic and cash machine.

#7   Twitter Online System   Twitter Online System – Proven Turnkey System That Only Requires You To
Set Up It ONCE, Forget About It, And Start
Making Money Through Twitter Today!

#8   Twitter Money Tree   Twitter Money Tree
– Stephen has been featured on Fox News, CNN, NBC, CBS, ABC, CW,
Daystar, ION, MyTV, Daytime and dozens of other shows talking to
millions about using Twitter to become celebrities and be able to pick
the money off of their own “Twitter Money Trees!”

#9   Paid4TweetN   Paid4TweetN
– We have watched the rise and fall of other so called "Twitter
Programs." Here is the reason why they fail: All of the other programs
out there only teach you how to get followers. You do not make money by
getting followers.

#10   Paid4TweetN   Twitter Rockstar
– When you use Twitter to build your brand online, you're not relying
on random Google searches. You're not relying on expensive PPC methods
that bring lukewarm consumers. You are using Twitter to filter out the
tire kickers and bring you the people that want to hear your voice.

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Seo Guidelines For Web Content Writers

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Content writing is of utmost importance for those who are involved in
online marketing businesses. Many companies, now days, offer content
writing services. They cater to a varied class of businesses. Webmasters
and marketing professionals who are related to Search Engine
Optimization (SEO) mostly use these.

SEO is a method to reach out to a larger number of clients using
search engines for marketing a website. SEO content can help clients
achieve higher search engine rankings.

But there is a difference between regular content writing and SEO
content writing. The difference is how you define your writing, and what
you need to attain as a professional online copywriter or content
writer. All the website owners want higher search engine rankings to
increase their visibility on the first result page so that they get more
targeted search engine traffic and they know their content can help
them achieve that. So they opt for SEO content that can help them
improve their search engine rankings. To stand out amongst your
competition require SEO content writers. The text below will lay down
SEO guidelines for web content writers.

1. Stress On Focused Pages

Search engines prefer focused pages, especially talking about a
particular topic or phrase. So, do not try to cover everything under the
aegis of a single page. Make pages focusing specific topics. It also
provides satisfaction to people who are fussy about keyword density.

2. Page Title

It is the most vital part of any webpage. It must appeal to the
search engines and attract them towards your page. It must present to
the search engines the most compelling reason to blog post it.
Preferably, use the entire phrase you are targeting, in the title.

3. Systematize Your Content

Organize your content using right tags wherever required. Search
engines specifically look for the right words at particular locations.
They look for the keyword you have placed in your entire content.

4. Keyword Density

Keyword density is calculated by (keywords/ total keywords)* 100.
Keyword density should range between 2-5%. Use the keywords wherever
they fit in appropriately.

5. Fresh Content

Content you post on your web site should be fresh as well as
informative so that they do not find your content repetitive and dull.
At the same time, it should be meaningful and knowledgeable which is
the basic purpose of your content, i.e., to reveal information. Make
content which is understandable by the readers as well as search
engines.

6. Link Baiting

Topics, which are link baiting, should receive special attention.

7. Number Of Words

Number of words should exceed 400 words. This will ensure that all the aspects are clearly and nicely defined.

Let me know if you want to add something more to this list of guidelines for content writers. 

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How I Generated Over 6000 Ideas to Write About on My Blog in 15 Minutes

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Ever run out of things to write about on your blog?

In this video screencast I want to show you how I came up with over 6000 thoughts to write about on my blog using two tools – an Auto Responder (I use Aweber (aff)) and a Simple Survey.

Setting this up took me all of 15 minutes work – after that it’s just been a matter of sitting back and watching the thoughts roll in.

You may not be able to generate 6000 thoughts (and the reality is that I can’t use that many) but this technique can be used on even a smallish blog.

Video Notes

How to Generate Thoughts to Write About on Your Blog – Transcript

I’ve had this video transcribed below for those who prefer to get it that way. The transcription provided by The Transcription People.

Today I want to show you a technique that I’ve been using just for the last few months, on how to come up with thoughts to write about on your Blog.

A lot of blogger face this problem – after a few months of blogging you run out of all those fantastic thoughts that you had when you started your blog, and you want to come up with more.

This is a technique that will work best on a blog with lots of readers, but even just some readers that, particularly readers that are subscribing to your newsletter, it can be used quite effectively, even in small numbers over a longer period of time.

So, you can see on the screen here, I’ve opened up AWeber. AWeber’s my email newsletter tool that I’ve talked about numerous times on ProBlogger.

What I’ve opened up here is the auto responder sequence for my Digital Photography School (I have a number of them).

This is an auto-responder that I’ve set up for DPS and one of the newsletters, and you can see here that on this particular one I have seven different messages that go out once someone subscribes to my newsletter. These are automated messages that go out at pre-determined intervals. You can see here the intervals on the left, they get a Welcome to DPS message straight away on the first day they sign up. Then they get a series of informational newsletters including one promotional one. So they really hear about he products that we have and get offered a discount, but they also get emails that are purely informational that give them quality links back into archives on the site.

Number seven here is the one I want to talk about today. “What would you like to learn about Photography Next?” is the title of it.

I’ve already opened it up here. Now, they’re getting this email, you’ll see there, it’s around four months into their sequence. So they’ve already been subscribed for a while, they’ve been getting our weekly newsletter updates, which is in addition to this auto-responder.

So they’ve got some connection with DPS, and then get this email. Basically thanks them for joining, and introduces the thought that we’re doing some plotting for the site which we’re always doing, and at the time I started this auto-responder, I was really doing a week of intensive plotting, and introduces the concept we want it to be, DPS to be as helpful as possible and we’ve got a survey to help us to improve the site and to come up with topics to write about. And then it gives them a link to click. When they click on that link, they are taken to a survey.

Now, I’ve set it up in SurveyMonkey. SurveyMonkey is a fantastic tool, I reckon you get a certain amount for free. I’ve signed up for the premium edition, because I’m sending so many people to this as part of my newsletter. This is the back end of SurveyMonkey where you set up your questions, but here you can see the questions that I’m asking.

I introduced the topic again, and talk about why I’m doing the survey. Then I get them to start to describe themselves in terms of the level of photographer that they are.

Then I question the question, “I want to see Tutorials on DPS on the following topics,” and get them to choose all that apply. Now, these are pre-determined topics that we do write on from time to time. The thought of this question is just to work out what the priorities of people are.

Then I question them which topics would you like to see a more comprehensive guide to? So here what I’m asking is, I’m trying to get a feel for what people might pay for information on, because I want to develop eBooks. So here I’m doing a bit of a survey on that. One of the largest ones was Travel Photography, so we developed an eBook on that. Then I questioned them a question about the post-production tools they use, Photoshop, Paintshop, you know, LightRoom, Aperture, that type of thing.

And this is the golden question, this is the one I want to talk about today. Apart from those listed above, what topics would you like to see covered more on DPS? Feel free to be as specific as you’d like. So anything from a general topic like underwater photography to more specific – like slow-synch flash, or how to sharpen images in Photoshop.

So I’m giving them permission there to go beyond those broad categories we covered earlier in the survey, and to question specific questions.

Now, SurveyMonkey gives you some fantastic analytics, and so you can see here the answer to that first question, I’ve graphed people. I’ve really got 71% of readers who say they’ve had a camera for a while, they’re honestly confident, but they want to get more advanced. And we get same sort of stats on these other ones. But what I want to go do down here below, is this last question that I’ve talked about.

You can see here, I’ve had this survey running for a couple of months now. I’ve had 6,369 people tell me what they want to get more information on. Specific questions. Now this is gold. This is really gold.

You get a download button here, and you can download it as a PDF or as an Excel, whatever you’d like.

Now, 6,000+ people have told me what they want to get information on, and they’ve given me specific questions. Now, some of these questions aren’t very helpful, some of the answers aren’t very helpful, you know, I’ve got someone here that says, “Fashion.” Well, we kind of figured that they probably would have ticked the Fashion Photography box above, but here we go, look, fixing problems like blown out skies, or wrinkle removal or skin softening. There’s three topics that I could go away and write on. Fish-eye photography, taking pics of babies and pets. You’ve got a lot of quite fascinating stuff here. A lot of these questions are very specific, they’re post-type questions. Some of them people joke and they give you crappy answers and stuff that they’re just trying to be amusing. But this is gold. There is 6,000 responses here.

Now DPS has a honestly large audience and so we are able to get 6,000 responses and that’s fantastic. But even a blog that may be getting only a small number of people signing up to it’s newsletter every day, what happens is, as an auto-responder, remember, I’ve set this up as the seventh thing, so they’re getting all this quality information first, but after a few months of being subscribed, they’re really still got questions, and they’re answering them.

We have around eight or nine hundred people sign up a day for this. So eight or nine hundred people are getting sent to this survey every day. You may have only eight or nine people getting this information every day, but you will find over time, if you have this as part of your auto-responder for a year or two, you’ll start to build up a bank of questions that you can then draw upon later.

So if I’m ever wondering, you know, “What should I write about today on my blog?” I tell you, that file, that Excel file that I opened up before is one of the first places that I go, because it is just gold, it’s got so much fantastic information.

Hope this has been helpful for you. It’s a technique that I’ve been using over the last few months on my blog and it’s really helped me to come up with a lot of fantastic things to write about on my site.
End of Recording.

This Post is from: ProBlogger Blog Tips.

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How I Generated Over 6000 Thoughts to Write About on My Blog in 15 Minutes

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Tomorrow We Triple the Price on Copywriting Scorecard for Bloggers Grab a Copy Today for just $9.97

Monday, August 30th, 2010

copywriting scorecard bloggersNearly two weeks ago we launched the groundbreaking new ProBlogger eBook – the Copywriting Scorecard for Bloggers.

Written by SEO specialist copywriter Glenn Murray it’s an eBook designed to help bloggers get their posts optimized for readers and search engines so that their posts reach their potential (you can read all about it here in more detail).

The feedback from those who have bought it has been incredibly positive with lots of fantastic reviews hitting the web.

We are about to Triple the Price!

We launched this new eBook at the special introductory price of $9.97 and intended to place the price up to $14.97 this week. But – as often happens with launches like this – we’ve changed that plot.

The price is still going up on at midnight on 1 September (EST US time) but it is really going up to $29.97 USD!

Yes – we’re tripling the price and we’re doing it for two reasons:

  1. we were told time and time again by those who have bought the eBook that $9.97 was a steal and that $14.97 was too cheap too.
  2. we chose to update the eBook significantly. One of the pieces of feedback that we got about version 1 was that it would be more useful with a working example that illustrated how to use the Scorecard. As a result – Glenn has spent time over the last 2 weeks adding a lot of new content to the eBook.

What’s in the Update?

The update is pretty significant – it adds a lot to the original version (it’s now over 100 pages) including:

  • NEW — A 33-page worked example, where we score one of my own posts and discuss our reasoning.
  • NEW — Electronic scorecard that automatically totals your score. You just select Yes or No.
  • NEW — Single page printable scorecard, containing all the the recommendations, but scaled to print on a single page.
  • NEW — Recommendation on using sentence case or title case for headings.
  • NEW — Expanded discussion of SEO copy.
  • NEW — Improved navigation, with bookmarks showing to the left of the PDF, so no need to scroll back and forth between Recommendations and Scorecard.

Add to Cart

Who gets the update?

In small – everyone will get the new version.

As of 1 September at midnight – anyone buying the eBook at $29.97 will get version 2 of it automatically. We’ll also be sending it to anyone who bought version 1 before that time.

So if you’ve already bought it – you’ll get an email sent to you (your paypal email address) with download details of version 2.

If you’ve not yet bought it – but want to get it before the price rises – you can buy version 1 today and you’ll also get an email with download details of version 2 when it is released.

Again – everyone will get the new version – it’s just a matter of how much you pay for it. If you buy before midnight on 1 September you’ll secure it for $9.97 – if you wait until after that time, you’ll pay $29.97. The choice is yours.

More Updates and Bonuses?

Will there be more updates? At this point Glenn and I are pretty pleased with how the eBook looks and works and are not plotting too many more updates to it. But we are putting together some extra bonuses and resources for those who buy it.

We’re hesitant to announce them right now as they’re partly based upon reader feedback but we already offer those who buy the Scorecard a newsletter which we’ll be using to send send some extra content/tips out with. We’re also looking at running a Q&A podcast session for those who’ve bought the eBook.

So yes – there will be a few bonuses for those who have bought the Copyrighting Scorecard for Bloggers.

Grab Your Copy Today

copywriting-scorecard-bloggers-1.jpgSo if you’ve been umming and aaahing about whether to grab the Scorecard – it’s time to make a choice and lock it in at the intro price.

We’ll not be returning to the price of $9.97 again as it is only becoming more valuable as we add content to it.

Grab your copy today.

Add to Cart

This Post is from: ProBlogger Blog Tips.

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Tomorrow We Triple the Price on Copywriting Scorecard for Bloggers
Grab a Copy Today for just $9.97

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Why Link Exchanges Are Like Mosquitoes

Monday, August 30th, 2010

A Guest post by Akila from The Road Forks

Last week, I had a revelation when, after spending ten minutes fiddling around with a VPN in Podunkville, China, I opened my email and found four link exchange requests, including one asking to exchange links with “The Toad Forks” rather than our website, The Road Forks. As I slammed my laptop lid down, I realized that link exchanges are the mosquitoes of the blogging world.

Imagine that all of us bloggers — fascinating and interested people engaged in making our blogs the Next Best Thing — sit down at a summer table with platters of thick-grilled hamburgers and corn on the cob next to an open cooler of dripping beers. The mosquitoes hover, pinching our legs and arms. We slap them away but their brothers come to replace them. They bloat with our blood, gorging and feeding on our health, and we develop unsightly rashes. That, my friends, are link exchange requests and we bloggers are helping these mosquitoes breed.

What is a link exchange request? A link exchange request is one where a site offers to link to your site in exchange for a reciprocal link. The key to this request is the requirement for a reciprocal link; in other words, if you don’t link to me, I don’t link to you.

Link exchange requests come in various forms. Some are from corporate entities seeking to promote blogs or sites by selling text links, though Google slashed PageRanks in 2007 in response to this tactic. Others are from bloggers — often, well meaning, newbie bloggers —- who send mass generic e-mails that cause me to inwardly groan, along the lines of, “Hey! Cool blog! Want to exchange links?”

Let me be clear, though: link exchanges are not e-mails from bloggers to others in the same genre inviting them to consider reading or linking to their blog because they have shared interests. If you are producing valuable content, you need to spread the word and e-mailing and networking with other bloggers is the best way to increase traffic to your site. Darren’s 11 tips to increase your chances of being linked to by another blogger boil down to two central tenets: get to know the person whose link you are asking for and produce content worthy of that link. A polite request that a person consider reading your blog is not the same thing as a request for a link in return for a link of their own.

Why do websites/bloggers want link exchanges? Link exchanges are an simple, get-rich-quick scheme to drive traffic and increase search engine results. In the small term, readers will jump to your blog, leading to more pageviews, ad revenue, and perhaps RSS subscribers.

Over the long term, links build your site’s “importance,” in the eyes of Google (and most other search engines, for that matter). A link exchange means more links for your site as well as theirs, more links leads to a higher Google PageRank, and a higher PageRank will cause a site to show up closer to the front page of Google search results, generating greater traffic for a site. Greater traffic means more ad revenue, fame, and the resulting glamour of being a hot-shot blogger.

The terrible news: By participating in link exchanges, you risk injuring your reputation, the reputation of others, and angering Google. What do all successful bloggers have in common? Trust. A link might send new readers to your site but they are only going to keep reading your site if they trust that you will produce fantastic content every week. The links on your blog are part of the content on your site; by linking to another site, you represent to your reader that the link is of excellent quality and will provide something valuable to the reader. If a reader clicks on a link that takes them to a site filled with ads for pills and dating programs, or to a blog that produces worse content than your own, the reader is going to question your judgment and wonder why you chose to link to that site. Nobody likes the guy who has to buy his friends. Unfortunately, by linking to one lousy site, you also devalue the other excellent sites on your blog. Terrible for you, terrible for your friends.

And, you certainly don’t want to irritate the most powerful player on the web. Google carries 71% of the search engine market and they despise link schemes. Google is in the business of providing the most accurate website hierarchy for a particular search term and falsely inflated links to a particular site lead to poor search results. In no less than three places in their Webmaster Guidelines, Google clarifies that participating in link schemes, including excessive link exchanges, could “negatively impact your site’s ranking in search results.”

Welcome to the new Internet where content is king.

Link exchanges are part of the ancient Internet, a system in which PageRank ruled and social media was a fancy word for e-mail. Today, Twitter, Facebook, and StumbleUpon drive more traffic to my blog (and, I suspect, most blogs) than links from other bloggers. In the last week of July 2010, Facebook not only dominated the social media sites but was the most visited website in the world – even more than Google – accounting for over 9% of all web traffic in that week. Facebook’s Like button and Twitter’s instantaneous communications reward fascinating or useful posts without using artificial means to game a blogger’s popularity.

Google is taking advantage of this revolution with Caffeine, its web indexing system launched in June 2010 that crawls blogs, social media sites, commercial sites, and user generated content at a 50% quicker rate. Previously, Google used to crawl pages once every few days or even less, resulting in stale web search results. Now, when you hit publish on your blog post, it will appear in Google search results in less than 30 minutes. This means that fresh content – whether in the form of blog posts, tweets, or Facebook posts – may be the key to landing at the top of Google searches. In fact, Google has recommended for years that webmasters stop obsessing about PageRank because it is only one of 200 factors used to determine search results.

The bottom line is that if you want to increase your readership in today’s Internet, focus on networking with other bloggers, effectively using social media tools to produce fresh content, and, most importantly, producing link-worthy content, rather than populating the Internet with infestations of spam-filled links. Maybe soon, we will all be able to sit back and bask in the sunny glow of a better, more usable Internet.

Read more from Akila at The Road Forks

This Post is from: ProBlogger Blog Tips.

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Why Link Exchanges Are Like Mosquitoes

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