The Great Content Challenge
What’s the great content challenge you ask? As a blogger and marketer, it’s when I know it’s time to post an article, yet I’m inspired to write elsewhere.
What’s the great content challenge you ask? As a blogger and marketer, it’s when I know it’s time to post an article, yet I’m inspired to write elsewhere.
If you think of a curator as a collector, then you might see content curation as aggregating links to other posts. But content curation is way more than that!
OK, well maybe this is tweaking what writing responsible content means, but if “responsible” means “answerable,” it seems it can be taken two very different ways.
Any serious blogger knows there’s no simple way of getting traffic to your blog, because blogging has to do with words, not numbers.
Unless your blogging consists of a single sequence of articles all on the same topic, you’re going to get some lousy bounce rates for some of your posts.
Making a living blogging can be tricky if you don’t know how to monetize without pitching. The tendency is to sell, sell, sell, but often this turns people off.
Blogging and social networking are an almost perfect match, except for the competing comment boxes problem. How do you overcome it?
Following up on the last post on blogging with what might be the main reason why many people shy away from it, namely the fear of exposure.
One thing holding a lot of people back from blogging is the idea that all their posts have to be perfect, and they just won’t cut it. Do you worry about this?
A lot of people wonder about whether they’ll get penalized if they write short posts with all the changes going on in the search engine world. Here’s the answer: