วันอาทิตย์ที่ 30 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2556

5 лучших недорогих способов генерации трафика

  


   Есть одно жёсткое условие прибыльности Вашего сайта – постоянный поток посетителей. Если никто не заходит на Ваш сайт, шансы получить прибыль ничтожны. Многие сайты пытались сделать это, но потерпели неудачу или даже прекратили свое существование.
   Для поддержки продающего сайта нужны деньги; фактически, чтобы заработать деньги – нужно вложить деньги.

Но, чтобы стимулировать посещаемость Вашего сайта, вовсе не нужна куча денег.
   Вы никогда не задумывались, как популярные сайты привлекают своих посетителей? Большинство из них тратят огромные деньги, вкладывая во множество рекламных кампаний и хитростей. Эти затраты оправдывают себя: сейчас эти сайты имеют огромное количество посетителей и высокую прибыль.
   Вам не обязательно делать то же самое, особенно если Вы не располагаете такими же ресурсами. Есть много способов привлечения трафика без необходимости затрат, которые Вы не можете себе позволить. Многие люди делали ставки на дорогостоящие методы, и в конечном итоге им пришлось отдать последнюю рубашку.
   Ниже я представлю Вам пять лучших способов привлечения недорогого трафика, который может быть очень полезным Вашему сайту. Даже если процент успешных сделок будет относительно небольшим, это будет выгодно для Вас при условии высокой посещаемости.

Обмен ссылками

   Эффективный и проверенный метод. Редкий сайт сегодня не содержит ссылок на другие сайты. Многие веб-мастера готовы обменяться ссылками друг с другом, чтобы как можно больше людей узнало о существовании их сайтов. Применив этот метод, Вы тоже вскоре увидите и почувствуете внезапный всплеск трафика, идущего с других сайтов.
    Важнейшим условием для обмена ссылками является сходство тематики или один и тот же сегмент рынка. Сайты должны иметь общие темы – это обеспечит целостность предоставления услуг и информации, которыми интересуется Ваша целевая аудитория.
    Кроме того, обмен ссылками увеличивает Ваши шансы на повышение поискового рейтинга. Общеизвестно, что поисковые системы продвигают на первые позиции сайты, имеющие входящие и исходящие тематические ссылки. Заняв выгодную позицию в поисковом рейтинге, Вы получите большой объем трафика без особых затрат.

Обмен трафиком

   То же, что обмен ссылками, но на более высоком уровне. Это может стоить немного больше, чем обмен или торговля ссылками, но в итоге выходит дешевле, потому что Вы получаете комиссионные, когда кто-то просматривает Ваш трафик.
   Обмен трафиком – возможность просматривать другой сайт или страницу. Сайт Вашего партнера может использовать Ваш контент, и наоборот, Вы можете использовать его материалы. В результате выигрывают оба, удваивая усилия по привлечению трафика.      
   Посетители другого сайта могут просматривать Ваши страницы и узнавать не только о Вашем сайте, но и о сайте партнера. Таким образом, увеличивается информированность общественности о Ваших сайтах.

Написание и публикация статей

    В Сети существует много электронных журналов и онлайн-энциклопедий, предлагающих бесплатную публикацию статей. Если Вы хотите сократить расходы, то пишите статьи сами. Есть много фрилансеров, готовых написать для Вас за небольшую плату, но в целях экономии денег Вам есть смысл заняться этим самостоятельно.
    Статьи должны перекликаться с тематикой Вашего сайта. Пишите о том, в чем имеете опыт, чтобы читатель мог почувствовать, что Вы владеете предметом, и захотел зайти на Ваш сайт. Пишите статьи с советами и рекомендациями на темы, относящиеся к Вашему рыночному сегменту.
    В конце статьи добавляйте ссылку на источник, ведущую на Ваш сайт. Напишите немного о себе и своем сайте. Если Вы представите понятную, информативную статью, после ее прочтения посетитель, скорее всего, зайдет на Ваш сайт.

Создание новостной рассылки

    Это может навести на мысли о тяжелой работе, потому что нужно написать весь этот материал, который пойдет в рассылку, но это не так. Есть множество авторов и источников, готовых бесплатно предоставить Вам материал с условием указания их авторства в Вашей рассылке. Это даст им бесплатную рекламу.
    По мере распространения Вашей новостной рассылки Вы можете расширить осведомленность общественности и создать базу подписчиков, которые будут регулярно посещать Ваш сайт.

Регистрация в онлайн-сообществах и форумах

    Это потребует от Вас только времени, ничего более. Вы можете делиться своим опытом и знаниями как на сайте, так и в множестве интернет-сообществ. Вы получаете бесплатную рекламу, участвуя в форумах, обсуждающих темы, сходные с тематикой Вашего сайта и рыночного сегмента.
    Поделитесь своим мнением и покажите, насколько хорошо Вы разбираетесь в предмете. По мере роста Вашего авторитета растет и репутация Вашего сайта: он становится авторитетным, честным бизнесом, внушающим людям доверие.

By Михаил Титов


How To Keep Your Brand Consistency As A Blogger

  

A brand is way more than your logo and slogan. The overall style that defines you as a blogger can tell people to expect this and that from you. People tend to like what they recognize. We give trust to things that all to something familiar. If you make it easy for anybody to perceive who you are and you stick to that persona you’ll surely make a good impression in the long haul.
   To state it upfront: diversity is undeniably good when you are a blogger. You can settle upon a wide range of topics to write about, you get to revamp the site from time to time and explore new ways to express yourself on the social media. A brand’s life is more relaxed in the blogosphere than, for instance, in the B2C world where each product has to create strong recognition in order to sell. We all know that.
  However, what I am going to say (in the next 200 words or so) is just this: once you have defined your own style, stray from it no more so that you’ll earn readers’ trust and build a loyal fan base.

Clean your blog’s appearance

When it comes to the design of your website, every detail should make a harmonious statement. Choose an assembly of no more than maybe 2-3 matching fonts (Kernest can help you combine them aesthetically). Decide the class parameters for links and set some unitary rules over when to use bold and italic in the body of the articles.
Images and color palettes used on the site also need to be coherent all together. And the core element, your logo, should be nothing less than wonderful. It’s a good idea to hire a designer on this, to be sure the graphics will be distinctive and appealing. If you’re on a tight budget, 99designs can be a great alternative.

Create a post trademark

It may be a crossed interview held simultaneously by two bloggers with a single interviewee. Or a face-to-face type of post like Daniel does. Or anything you would find relevant. Find a special formula of post and regularly spice up your blog with it. This is a trait of A-list blogs that you can easily put into practice.

Admit your own biases publicly if they exist

It’s pretty hard to keep 100% unbiased – and actually few blogs try to. The essential thing is not to camouflate your partialities behind a fake objective tone, or you will lose credibility. First of all, choose carefully who you advocate and make sure you do believe in that party, so that you can write about it in a convincing manner. After that, go ahead and tell people: “This is me and those are my beliefs; now hear what I have to say”.
For instance, if you’d like to advocate Microsoft and hence you love Internet Explorer, make your readers aware of that, so that they won’t be intrigued that you refused to review their app just because they’re on the Firefox bandwagon. You got my point. Maybe you’re not in for Pulitzer award, but anyhow it’s good to be honest.

Use whitelabels

Customize and adapt everything that may interfere with your public presence and wipe out parasite messages. For instance, we often use third party services to create and disseminate web forms and surveys, newsletters or press releases. In respect for your own image, all materials that are sent to the public should display your own logo and bare the minimum identification elements of the original service.
I really am tired of those newsletters I occasionally with a prominent Vocus mark on their headline. It takes me some 5 seconds to realize the message is actually from a financial blog I subscribed to, and this thing sucks. Consider spending a few bucks more and maybe buying a license for the sake of having a whitelabel material that you can customize for your own brand.

Design a brand-centered Facebook fan page

Apart from the website itself, Facebook is the second best piece of web real estate for your blog. Customize your fan page to display the distinctive appearance of your blog. The cover photo can be a sample of your site’s header or a combination of graphics that resemble it, like Lifehacker has. You can unleash your creativity with the Welcome tab HTML – make it speak clearly about your brand!

Remain a real person

A friend’s advice: don’t let your own personality be assimilated to the blog itself. You are the head of it, but you may lose opportunities of networking and personal development if you incorporate your image totally in your work. Put up a profile for yourself on social networks, apart from your business pages. This way you will add value to your business online presence, by proving there is a real human behind it.
Good luck!

Laura Moisei has a degree in Communication and writes for 123ContactForm.com, an app that helps users create web forms and surveys for any blog and webpage. Laura’s daily delights are blogging, photography and good food.

By Guest Author


11 Rules to Work By

Rules are meant to be broken, right? Sure, you can break rules whenever you want, but just remember there are consequences.
Over the past 10 years I’ve broken a lot of rules, and each time I did it resulted in a negative consequence. In most cases the consequence didn’t occur immediately, however it did occur eventually.
If you want to be a daredevil, by all means, break rules. But if you want to create a thriving business, you should follow rules. And more importantly, you should follow these rules:

Rule #1: Never fly solo

Google, Apple, Groupon, Zygna, and Microsoft are just a few of the examples of companies that are doing very well. Do you know what they all have in common? They were all founded by multiple co-founders.
If you want to get into the business world, do it with someone. Flying solo may sound great at first, but things can get tough if you don’t have a co-pilot. This way when you are unsure of what to do when things get tough you have someone you can consult.
The most important time to have a co-founder is when you first start your company. This is typically the time where cash is tight and you can’t afford to hire people even though there is a ton of work that needs to be done.
If you are one of those lucky few that already have a co-founder, good for you! If you don’t you should read this article, as it will help you find the perfect business partner.

Rule #2: Have a clear sense of ownership

When you work with business partners and team members not only should you have a written contract on each person’s ownership, but more importantly you should clearly define what each person is responsible for.
See, the purpose of having business partners and employees is that everyone brings a different skill set to the table. With these unique skills, each person can do different tasks and start specializing so that your business can be more efficient.
Having an understanding of who is responsible for what in your organization will ensure that everyone knows who is doing what, what they expect to accomplish, and when everything will be done. This ensures that everyone in your company is on the same page and is sharing the same vision.

Rule #3: Never make promises you can’t keep

The most common mistake new entrepreneurs make, and I made this when I first started out, is that I over promised and under delivered. Luckily I quickly learned that if I under promised and over delivered I would have happy customers that would keep on paying me for a long time.
Even to this day, I constantly meet entrepreneurs who make promises they can’t keep. And the funny part about it is that most of these promises they can’t keep are not important.
If you can learn to keep your promises, you’ll quickly shine in the world of entrepreneurs. Over the past 10 years the majority of the people I run into can’t keep their promises.

Rule #4: Go above and beyond to make customers happy

As I mentioned in rule number 3, under promise and over deliver. That’s the easiest way to keep your customers happy.
What you’ll find is that the best way to acquire new customers is to make your current ones happy. With social media, customers have much more power now than they ever used to. So if you can go above and beyond for your customers, they’ll gladly be willing to tweet about your business, brag to other companies about how good you are, and most importantly constantly refer you new business.
Plus, the biggest benefit of making your customers happy with you is that they’ll stick around a lot longer, which will increase your life-time-value. This is important, as you will quickly learn that it is much harder to acquire new customers than it is to keep customers. So make sure you go above and beyond for your customers.

Rule #5: There is no such thing as a 9 to 5 job

You could even say this rule applies to you if you are working a 9 to 5 job, but if you are an entrepreneur it applies even more. Over the past 10 years I haven’t taken a vacation or a day off. Just because you’re tired of working, or are sick doesn’t mean business is going to stop and wait for you to come back.
Be prepared to work 24/7 and don’t complain about the long hours. It’s life and if you can’t do it, then you aren’t cut out to be an entrepreneur.
The best advice I can give you is make sure you are enjoying what you are doing. Because if you are, working 80 hour weeks won’t be that hard, as it won’t feel like work.

Rules #6: Business and emotions don’t mix

Although I mentioned this in early blog post this month, I can’t stress enough that business and emotions just don’t mix. When you get emotional you’ll start making decisions that will likely make you feel better in the short term, but it will cause your business to suffer.
Base all of your decisions off of logic. Through these 4 simple tactics, you can cut emotions out of your life so that you can make better business decisions:
  1. Stay grounded – when something good happens to you, don’t get too excited as someone out there still is better off than you. And when something bad happens, don’t get down on yourself as people out there have it much worse off than you.
  2. Don’t hang out with emotional people exclusively – if you tend to hang out with emotional people too often, you’ll start embracing negative emotions.
  3. Stop bullshiting – by cutting out useless conversations in your life, you’ll also cut out unnecessary drama. And the less drama you have, the easier it is to make logical decisions.
  4. Don’t count your chickens until the eggs hatch – just because a contract is signed or someone claims that they are going to pay you, it doesn’t mean they will. You have to wait until you have the money in your bank account and it clears. If you start getting excited about “potential business”, you’ll start getting disappointed.

Rule #7: Don’t spread yourself too thin

I’ve made this mistake one too many times over the years and I still make it to a much lesser extent. By focusing my effort on one company instead of multiple businesses I’ve been able to spend more time on my startup, which has lead to an increase in revenue.
A good example of an entrepreneur who doesn’t spread himself too thin is Mark Zuckerberg. He eats, drinks, and sleeps Facebook. He doesn’t invest in other companies nor has he tried to found other businesses. He knew that if he spent all of his time on Facebook, and nothing else, he would succeed.
Now granted, if you spend all of your time on one company, it probably won’t be as big as Facebook, but you’ll have better odds of succeeding than if you did dividing your time in multiple ventures instead of one.

Rule #8: Never stop learning

Once I starting making some money, I started to get comfortable and naturally I lost a bit of my drive. And when I made even more money, I got even more comfortable and I started to get stuck in my ways.
At first it doesn’t sound that bad because you think you know what’s best for your business, but sadly it isn’t always the case. You need to keep up with what’s happening in your industry, or else your competitors are going to start eating your lunch.
This happened to one of my older companies and we were able to recover and surpass our competitors again, but it quickly taught me that you always have to be learning so that you can keep on innovating.
Don’t ever get stuck in your ways. And although it sounds easy not to, once you start making money you’ll realize that you’ll change. Keep an open eye out for things as you can always be learning.

Rule#9: Protect your butt

Over the past couple years I’ve felt I had bad luck. It seems like I have constantly been getting audited by the government and people have been trying to sue me for random things. However, after talking with some seasoned entrepreneurs, I quickly learned that it’s a natural part of the entrepreneur game.
See, the larger you get, and the more money you make, the more people that will start coming after you. The reason is simple… you’re just painting a big target on your back. And they just see it as a way to make a quick buck.
Instead of stressing out about these things, you need to be prepared. Make sure you are contact with good lawyers and accountants and you have insurance on your company in case someone sues you.
The best advice I can give you if someone tries to come after you is not to be cheap. Good lawyers and accountants cost money and the money they cost you is a drop in the bucket compared to how much they can save you.

Rule #10: Be cheap, but not with employees

For those of you who know me on a personal level, you know that I am a frugal guy. Compared to what I earn, I don’t spend that much money. I don’t like wasting money on fancy offices, cars, material objects, or even food. But the one thing I spend a lot of money on is employees.
I’m a big believer that you have to spend money on good talent… good employees are hard to come by. At the same time you should also conserve money on everything else so when times get tough you don’t have to resort in firing any of your employees.
The best part about taking care of your employees is that they’ll be loyal and stick with you for a very long time. If you are a serial entrepreneur you always want to have the option of taking your employees to your next business and this is only possible if you treat your employee right.

Rule #11: Perfection isn’t important, speed is

I used to be a perfectionist. I used to care what my peers thought about my company and the way I looked. But what I quickly realized was that none of them were spending money with my company, so it shouldn’t have mattered what they thought.
If I focused on creating a minimal viable product and getting it out there as quick as possible I would have literally saved over a million dollars with my last business. And millions more with my previous ones.
Get things out as quick as possible because if you don’t, someone else will beat you to the punch. Nothing will ever be perfect! Get your product or service out there, get feedback from your customers/potential customers, and iterate.

Conclusion

The rules I mentioned above are the ones I have found to work over the last 10 years, but instead of taking my word for it, try them out for yourself and let me know what you think.
Rules evolve with time and just because I have been an entrepreneur for a while doesn’t mean I know everything. Just like you I am learning new things every day. So if you have ideas on how to make these rules better or if you have any other rules that would like to share, leave a comment.

By Neil Patel

5 Quick Ways to Improve Your Blog

    Let’s say that you have a few hours free and you want to dedicate it to your blog. It’s not enough time to take on a major project such as building a new theme or completely redoing your categories/tags (at least not if you have a large site), but you want to do something to make your blog better.

    If you find yourself with that blessing, here are five things that you can do right now to improve your blog, all of which take less than an hour and some only take a few minutes.

   Best of all, doing these things will, in most cases, have an immediate or near-immediate impact on your site. Making it more approachable with better content.
So here are some ways you can improve your site right now.

5. Tweak Your Theme

   You might not have the time you need to overhaul your theme completely, but what about tweaking it a bit? Why not see if you can improve your site’s typography, thus making your text easier to read? Maybe it’s time for a better logo?
    Though, in a perfect world, the look of a site would not impact the way it is read, appearance matters a great deal on the Web, especially when it affects readability. Take a few moments to look at your site, analyze what its weakest points are visually and address them.
Even if it is as simple as adding new RSS buttons, it can be a huge help.

4. Run a Site Speed Test

   How fast does your site load? What’s slowing it down the most? If you don’t know, run a site speed analysis and find out. Then all you have to do is eliminate whatever is slowing you down and you should notice a drastic difference in your site’s speed ,all without moving hosts or paying more money.
   If you have files that are slowing you down but can’t remove them, consider hosting them on Amazon Cloudfront or Rackspace Cloud to greatly increase their download speed cheaply. Also, be sure to optimize images as needed to keep them from dragging your site down.

3. Tweak/Add Static Pages

    Though most people read blogs for the day-to-day content, most people become regular readers, at least in part, due to something available on the static pages of your site.
    If you check your traffic stats, you’ll likely find that your static pages are among the most popular on your site but, since they aren’t being constantly written, they fall out of date.
   Take a few moments to update or add to your static pages. Write a little bit about yourself, include a picture if you can to forge a more human connection and add pages that compliment your regular blog topics. It works great.

2. Add a Feature

    Though adding features to your blogs recklessly can get you in trouble, especially with your site’s speed and appearance, if you have been wanting to add Twitter interaction or a new widget, now is a great time.
    Since WordPress and other blogging platforms make it so easy to add plugins, widgets and other elements, if you want to try out a new tool or service, you can do so with relative ease and safety. However, be sure to closely monitor how it affects your site and ensure that it does more good than harm.

1. Brainstorm

    Though brainstorming isn’t as immediate with its gratification, it is something you will see benefit from tomorrow and for a long time moving forward.
   The problem is that, if you’ve been blogging long enough, idea generation and blog post writing are likely part of the same process. If you don’t constantly have ideas ready when you wake up in the morning, you spend time coming up with ideas that should have gone to writing and crafting the perfect post.
  If you brainstorm in advance, you’ll find that your posts are much higher quality. They are better thought out, have much tighter writing and tend to wonder off course less. If you post every weekday and you take an hour now to come up with 15 good ideas, you’ll have three weeks of high-quality posts in your future.
  What can improve your site more than that?

Bottom Line

   When it comes to making your site better, it doesn’t take a lot of time, just a lot of heart and willingness to sacrifice a few moments to spend on things that are not directly related to blogging.
   Best of all, these are just some of the things you can do to make your site better. There are plenty of other things that you can improve on the quick. You just have to beilling to look around.

By Jonathan Bailey

How to Find Free Pictures for Your Blog

This is a guest post by Mandy Barrington. If you want to guest post on this blog, check out the guidelines here.

Adding visual interest in the form of images is a widely-used method for attracting readers to blog articles. If you’re holding back from spicing up your blog for fear of cost or (gasp) copyright infringement, here’s some advice to get you informed and comfortable with posting images:

Get to Know the Terminology

Unless explicitly noted, any image you find on the internet could be copyrighted, which means you could be held liable for copyright infringement. Are you up for taking that chance? Those of us who prefer to stay legal will typically be looking for images with some form of a Creative Commons license. This license is less restrictive than the traditional “all rights reserved” copyright (to varying degrees). Here’s a breakdown of the terms, acronyms, and icons associated with them, according to creativecommons.org:

Attribution: CC BY

Allows you to distribute, tweak, and/or build upon the original image for personal or commercial purposes, provided that you credit the creator.

Attribution-NoDerivs: CC BY-ND

Allows you to distribute the image “unchanged and in whole” for commercial and non-commercial purposes, provided that you credit the creator.

Attribution-ShareAlike: CC BY-SA

Allows you to tweak and build upon the original image for commercial and non-commercial purposes, provided that you credit the creator. Any new art you create based on the original image will carry the same license and be available for commercial use by others.

Attribution-NonCommercial: CC BY-NC

Allows you to tweak or build upon the image non-commercial purposes, provided that you credit the creator. Any new art you create will not carry the same license as the original image, but still must be used for non-commercial purposes only.

Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike: CC BY-NC-SA

Allows you to tweak and build upon the original photo for non-commercial reasons only, provided that you credit the creator.

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs: CCBY-NC-ND

Allows you to share the image, unchanged, for non-commercial purposes only provided that you credit the author. This is the most limited license.

Image Borrowing Best Practices

Each image released under creative commons likely has one of the above licenses or some variation of it. To be on the safe side, you should always check the license agreement to make sure you aren’t violating anything. It may take some time at first, but as you become more familiar with the licenses, you’ll know where to look to determine the facts more quickly.
Not all free images require a credit to the image creator; many images on stock photography site Stock.xchng don’t ask for attribution, but their standard license does request that you “take the time to comment on and rate the Image you downloaded and do your best to show the work you created with the Image to the photographer.” Whether you’re crediting the image author or simply letting them know how the photo was used, it really is a small price to pay for a free, quality, and legal image.

Where to Find Free, Quality Images

Some of the best places to find free stock images:
1. Everystockphoto
This site describes itself as a “license-specific photo search engine.” It searches many of the popular free stock photo sources and allows you restrict results based on a variety of parameters, including account requirement, shape, resolution, and license.
2. Flickr’s Creative Commons Search
This social image-sharing site has gained a reputation for harboring high-quality free photos. Search through the Creative Commons section or use the advanced search feature to specify a search within the Creative Commons-licensed content, plus you can identify whether you’re looking for content that can be edited or used commercially.
3. Stock.xchng
As discussed earlier, there are plenty of images on this site with more lax licensing that doesn’t require attribution. However, you’ve got to watch out for the much higher quality, payment-requiring iStockphoto thumbnails that get posted alongside the free stock.xchng results.
4. 123rf
If you’re just looking for something small, stock photography site 123rf offers many of its small-sized (think 400px at the longest side) images for free. Just search their free images section, found under the Stock Photography header on the home page (or by clicking their link above).
5. Google Creative Commons Image Search
Of course, if there’s a searching need, Google has a tool for it. Within their existing image search, Google added a usage rights parameter to their advanced image search. Here, you can specify whether the image should carry a license that allows reuse, commercial use, and/or modification.

One Final Thought

Now that you’re equipped to find images legally and without charge, here’s one last consideration: why not try creating your own images? Original photography and graphics can add value to your blog and make it appear more personal. While stock photos are a great option, especially in a pinch, don’t rule out the idea of adding non-canned images to your next post. Challenge yourself to come up with your own pictures depicting your product, service, or company; and guess what? It’s license-free!
 
About the Author: Mandy Barrington is a web design and blogging extraordinaire at RYP Marketing, a results-driven online marketing agency specializing in website design and optimization. Check out more ramblings from the RYP team on their blog.

By Guest Author


8 Key Tips for Building Successful Website

1. Content (Useful, informative, free, and easy to understand)

If you offer well written, original, easy to understand information, spiced up with good imagery, the chances of getting quality links, social media exposure and high spots in SERPs are bigger. The whole point of the Internet is finding useful, relevant, free information. Everything is about information. If you’re able to convey it in a manner that stands out from the crowd you’re automatically step ahead from the others in the pool.

2. Basic SEO

I vouch for the fact that you don’t have to be a SEO expert to rank your site high on Google search. Just several things to remember here:
  • include meta title tags,
  • optimal and natural usage of keywords,
  • provide good link bait article titles,
  • simple navigation through out the site,
  • proper usage of H1, H2 and H3 tags,
  • include sitemap,
  • use Google Webmaster Tools and Google Analytics to gain insight on what works and what’s not,
  • use robots.txt file,
  • proper permalink structure,
  • avoid duplicate content (CMS issue),
  • use canonical tags.
  • read the Google SEO Starter Guide (PDF).

3. Design

You want more eyeballs on your website, and you want them to stick with it more often. Except offering quality content you’ll need some good graphics for your site. Number one tip: If you’re serious about your site don’t use free, generic template. I would go even further. Don’t use paid template that is available online for others to buy. Pay someone to design a unique website for you. It doesn’t need to be jaw dropping and very expensive. A simple, pretty enough, and unique look would be good for starters.

4. Competitors

Whatever you do, you have to be more innovative, original, have a better design, better content than your competitors. Simply try to beat the competition. Use them to learn what works for them, and what doesn’t. Don’t be antagonistic towards them. Instead try to befriend them and let them become your mentors. They rule your niche at this moment. Learn what they did in order to achieve what they are now. That doesn’t mean just to read their blogs daily, but to investigate what they are doing. Where is their presence, who is linking to them, what CMS are they using, their SEO etc.

5. Promotion

Promote your site whenever you have a chance to do it, but do not exaggerate (don’t be a spammer). Also several things to remember here:
  • use Facebook, Twitter, Google+, or any other social platform popular at the moment,
  • comment on other blogs related to your niche,
  • be active on forums,
  • guest post frequently on well established blogs,
  • pay for ads if you really have to (Adwords).
This will certainly lead to significant exposure of your site. If you have the previous 4 points in place it’s just a matter of time when the ball starts rolling.

6. Speed

Make your site load fast as much as possible. This is important from two aspects: user experience and a SEO factor. Several things to remember:
  • Use good server
  • Optimize your code,
  • Optimize the images,
  • Use sprites,
  • Use tools such as Google Speed, YSlow, Web Page Test, Pingdom,
  • Gzip and minify your pages and static components where possible,
  • Make your pages cacheable (both server and browser side),
  • Use CDN for static content,
  • If you’re using scripts, prefer asynchronous loading or place them at the bottom,
  • Avoid redirects,
  • Read in details what Google and Yahoo have to say about it.

7. E-mail addresses and RSS subscribers

Usually young webmasters and bloggers are overwhelmed with information and it might happen to forget to implement thing or two or they may think that some of the tips are irrelevant and not worth. So remember, capture e-mail addresses and get people to subscribe to your feed early. Two-three years from now (if you’re good) you might have 50k email list and 50k RSS Subcribers. And that is a big valuable asset. Trust me.

8. Monetization

This is the cherry on top of the cake. It’s time to gather the fruits of your labor. I’ll suggest don’t do it early. Wait some time until your blog gets traction. The possibilities are virtually endless and experimentation is the key. There are basically three main methods to get money out of your blog/site:
  • Placing ads (CPC, CPM, CPA, CPV). Basically you need click, page view, action or video view in order to get paid.
  • Promoting affiliate products.
  • Selling you own products (ebooks, membership websites, services – design, coding, coaching, etc).
Wrap up
Of course these 8 tips are not everything you should have in mind but I would say they’re essential. Anyhow, the most important tip would be that you do your experiments with everything I said above and come to your own conclusions about what works for you, your blog and your niche.

By  Guest Author

วันเสาร์ที่ 29 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2556

How To Get A Logo For Your Site



Many people email me asking in what items they should invest money first for their blogs or websites. I usually reply stating that the domain/hosting package should always be the first priority. Once you have that covered, however, the logo becomes your next priority.

Using a free WordPress theme is not an issue in the beginning, but you should get the logo as
soon as possible, because it will increase the credibility of your website and start building your online brand.

And the good news is that getting a professional looking logo is not hard nor expensive these days. There are basically four methods you can use, and I explain them in this article: 4 Ways To Get A Logo For Your Website.

The only method I left out is using a logo maker software or online tool, but that is because I don’t think the results you get here are worth your time or money.
Anyway check out the article if you are looking to get a new logo for your site.

by Daniel Scocco