Social Media Marketing Insight from 21 Smart People (And Me, Too)

There’s a new book out called Success Secrets of the Social Media Marketing Superstars . Yes, that title sets off my hyperbole radar a bit too (not to mention my alliteration alert), but it’s a solid collection of smart social media advice based on real-world case studies, best practices, and proven techniques. I wrote Chapter Two of the book – The Psychology of Social Media . It’s about applying tried and trued influence factors in the social media space to build a business or make whatever case you’re trying to make. Here’s what else you’ll learn: How to Create a Mega-Following With Social Media – Gary Vaynerchuk Personality : How To Stand Out In Virtual Crowd – Andy Wibbels

3c3b757d57button.gif Social Media Marketing Insight from 21 Smart People (And Me, Too)

Continued here:
Social Media Marketing Insight from 21 Smart People (And Me, Too)

Web Traffic Secrets

Feature Product Review:Every marketing campaign that you work in Internet marketing will ultimately boil down to whether you are making money out of it or not. And, in order to get money, your sites will need to drive massive traffic. How do you that? Perhaps you can consider using coaching programs such as Web Traffic

Originally posted here:
Web Traffic Secrets

The Three-Step Guide to Getting More Traffic by Writing Less

Ever wonder where you’re supposed to find the time to promote your blog? If you’re blogging in your spare time, it can seem impossible. You’re already struggling just to publish a post every weekday, and sometimes you can’t even manage that. You want to work on your SEO, twitter following, and relationships with popular bloggers, but you also have a job, family, friends — responsibilities that are just more important. And so you wonder: should you just keep going, doing the best you can? Or is there a strategy you can use that doesn’t require so much time? I started to research the answer to that question about a year ago, and after working with more than 50 bloggers, trying different things, I think I’ve found one. As it turns out, the answer isn’t doing more. It’s doing less . Let me explain. Step One: Publish only one blog post per week Whoever said you have to publish a blog post every weekday? Nobody, as far as I can tell. It’s just what everyone does, and so most of us assume it’s the only way to do it. But it’s not. If you’re strapped for time, there’s nothing wrong with cutting back on the number of posts you publish each week. Your readers might even be grateful. Most people have so much to read that they don’t have time to keep up with all of your blog posts, and they feel bad about it. By cutting back, you make it easier for them to stay a subscriber. So how many posts should you publish, exactly? There’s no set number, but here’s a suggestion: start with one really good post per week, and if you have time, work your way up. The key word is “good.” One well-written, well-thought-out blog post can get you more links and traffic than hundreds of hurried ones. Some writers are faster than others, but in general, if you’re spending less than two hours on most of your posts, you’re probably going too fast. Cut back the quantity, and focus on quality. By itself, this will often double or triple your traffic. But it also does something else: it frees up time to focus on promotion. Step Two: Publish one guest post per month on popular blogs As you’ve probably seen, there are hundreds of strategies for promoting a blog. In an ideal world, you would use them all, digging dozens of channels for traffic to come flowing in. There’s only one problem: you don’t live in an ideal world. And neither do I. Even if you were working on your blog full-time with a dozen employees to help you, you couldn’t do everything . So don’t try. Instead, focus on one strategy, and get really good at it. My advice: start with guest blogging . Here’s why: pretty much every other traffic strategy depends on you having connections. To make SEO work, you need links from trusted sites. To make twitter work, you need to get retweets from people who have a lot of followers. To make social bookmarking work, you need connections with social media power users who can bring you dozens or even hundreds of votes. And that’s hard when you’re a beginner, because you don’t have any of those connections. In my opinion, it’s far, far easier to establish relationships with influential people first , and then use those connections to fuel the other strategies. If you can publish just one guest post per month for popular blogs, at the end of the year, you’ll have made connections with twelve very influential people who can help you grow your blog. That’s not going to give you 100,000 subscribers all by itself. But it will give you a nice foundation, and it’s one you can build on. Step Three: Slowly start doing more posts and promotions Once you start getting results, I think you’ll find it’s a lot easier to expand your efforts. Everyone is more motivated to work on something that’s working. If you land a guest post on a big blog and pick up a few hundred subscribers, you won’t have to push yourself quite so hard to work on your next post. You’ll want to do it, and that makes blogging a lot more enjoyable. You’ll also have the connections you need to slowly start trying some other traffic strategies. For instance, you could: Publish a special piece of content, such as a free report or video, and then use your connections to get links from popular blogs ( Here’s a free tutorial on how to do that ). Build a following on twitter to help promote your posts, and then strategically make a post go viral ( Here’s a free tutorial on how to do that, too ). Pick a search phrase that gets hundreds of thousands of searches per month, and then use your connections to get trusted links (That tutorial is coming this Friday). By themselves, none of those strategies are new. Anyone who has been blogging for more than a few months probably dreams about attracting links, building a twitter following, and getting a first page ranking on Google. The difference is you’ll actually be able to do it. Cutting your posting schedule will free up the time you need to work on promotion, and guest blogging will give you the connections you need to pull them off. It’s a very simple system, but it’s also one that gives you everything you need while investing a more reasonable amount of time. Is the system perfect? No. In fact, it has one serious flaw: Isn’t getting a guest post on a popular blog kind of hard? Yeah, it can be. With audiences numbering in the tens or even hundreds of thousands, popular bloggers are justifiably careful about the quality of content they publish. Frequently, they also have a lot of bloggers volunteering to do guest posts, so the competition can be stiff. But it’s not impossible. New bloggers do it on a regular basis here at Copyblogger, as well as many other popular blogs. There’s no reason you can’t do it too. You just need a few tricks of the trade to help you get started. Check out the free GuestBlogging.com videos If you haven’t seen the GuestBlogging.com videos yet, you should check them out . They’re free, and they contain some of the most powerful strategies I’ve learned while writing for Copyblogger and building popular blogs of my own. So far, thousands of people have signed up for them, and many are saying it’s some of the best blogging advice ever published. The bad news is that I’m about to take it all down. No, it’s not because I’m the King of Mean. ( Even though I am .) It’s because next week, I’m opening the doors to a new training program I’ve put together specifically for people who are serious about building a popular blog. I’ll leave the videos up for about another week, but once the training program starts, I’ll be taking them down to give members 100% of my attention. I’ll probably be releasing them again at some point, but I’m not sure when, and I didn’t want the Copyblogger readers to miss out. So, if you’ve been looking for a strategy you can implement in your spare time without having a lot of connections, be sure to take a look . It’s not the only strategy for building a popular blog. But if you’re strapped for time, I think it’ll work well for you. About the Author: Jon Morrow is the Associate Editor of Copyblogger and the founder of GuestBlogging.com . Get more from Jon on twitter .

3c3b757d57button.gif The Three Step Guide to Getting More Traffic by Writing Less

Read the rest here:
The Three-Step Guide to Getting More Traffic by Writing Less

Introducing GuestBlogging.com (Check out the Free Videos)

So, you’ve heard my take on why guest blogging is important . Over the years, you’ve probably seen other popular bloggers talking about it too. But maybe you can’t help thinking … how does it help you build a popular blog of your own ? If you’ve been wondering, head over to GuestBlogging.com , because over the next 10 days, I’m going to show you. We’ll talk about: How to get your first 1000 blog subscribers, even if none of the leaders in your niche know who you are yet How to stop getting ignored by popular bloggers and get the links you deserve How to build a following on twitter to help you promote your blog posts How to get your blog a first page ranking on Google, without knowing all of the technical details of SEO Didn’t know guest blogging could help you do all of that? I didn’t either, when I first started. Over the years though, I’ve gotten to see some pretty powerful examples, and so I decided to make some videos for you and share them with you on Guestblogging.com . Here’s how it’ll work: Every few days, I’ll release a new video that walks you through real-world examples and strategies for how you can use guest blogging to build a popular blog. Right now, only the first video is available, but opt in, and I’ll e-mail you as I post new ones. As of right now, there’s nothing for sale. The videos are 100% content, no sales or marketing messages at all. When we’re done with them, I will tell you about a new training program I’m creating specifically for bloggers who are serious about increasing their traffic. But that’s at least a week or so away. For now, enjoy the free videos, and learn about all of the cool ways guest blogging can help you. Click here to get started. See you there! About the Author: Jon Morrow is the Associate Editor of Copyblogger and the Founder of GuestBlogging.com . Get more from him on twitter .

3c3b757d57button.gif Introducing GuestBlogging.com  (Check out the Free Videos)

Go here to see the original:
Introducing GuestBlogging.com (Check out the Free Videos)

The Glass Ceiling, the Inner Circle, and the Key to Building a Popular Blog

“What am I doing wrong?” I whispered to the computer screen. A part of me wanted nothing more than to go to bed and forget about blogging forever. And yet, there I was, hunched over the computer, as I dug through my traffic stats for the millionth time. Somewhere inside was the answer to why I wasn’t getting more traffic, and I was going to find it. Some people would have said I was asking for too much. The blog was already doing decently well, averaging about 100 visitors a day after only two months. I got at least a few glowing comments on every post I wrote. Several people had sent e-mails, complementing me on my writing. But the problem was the blog wasn’t growing. I was putting out better content than anyone else in my niche. I tried every traffic strategy you can name. I was working on it so hard that my day job was suffering. And yet the traffic stayed the same. It was like I’d run up against some invisible barrier, and nothing would push me past it. I was beginning to think I’d be doomed to 100 visitors per day forever, and that certainly wasn’t enough to quit my job over. I sighed and pushed back from the computer. “I’ll figure it out tomorrow,” I said, heading off to bed. And the next morning I woke up with a peculiar idea that explained everything. The glass ceiling What if I told you the blogosphere has a sort of “glass ceiling?” The idea goes something like this: Anyone can start a blog. If you work hard, you can even grow it to a few hundred visitors a day or so. But at some point, the growth stalls out. You reach a plateau. It’ll be like you’ve run into a glass ceiling — an invisible but bulletproof barrier. You’ll see bloggers on the other side, and they don’t seem to be doing anything different than you are. But for some reason, they were able to break through, and you weren’t. It took me two years and three failed blogs to figure this out. And the answer is nothing close to what I expected. The inner circle The good news about the glass ceiling is there is a door. The bad news is it’s guarded. You see, every niche has an “inner circle.” A group of people who command a lot of attention. Everyone reads their blogs (or books). Their opinions are widely respected. And they often coordinate their marketing to help each other grow. In the blogging niche, it’s people like Brian Clark, Darren Rowse, Chris Brogan, and Sonia Simone — who, of course, all came together to form Third Tribe . In real estate investing, it’s gurus like Bill Bronchick, Ron Legrand, and Robert Kiyosaki. It doesn’t matter what niche or topic you point to; you’ll find an inner circle. And if you want serious traffic — and by serious, I mean thousands of visitors per day – the fastest way to do that is to convince members of the inner circle in your niche to promote you. They’re not going to come find you The odds are you’re not going to publish a post some day that makes all of the insiders in your niche want to know you. If you want their help, you have to proactively build relationships. The bloggers who bypass the glass ceiling don’t just do it by publishing more or better content than everyone else. They also do it by working behind the scenes to build friendly relationships with people who can help them. The question is, how? That’s the last piece of the puzzle. And it’s one that I stumbled across totally by accident. The key to building a popular blog Late one night, I was working on my blog and just so happened to get an IM from Brian Clark. I’d been hanging around in the Teaching Sells forums for a few months, not only soaking up the content, but answering questions from other members. Little did I know it, but I’d caught Brian’s attention, and he reached out to me. “I really like what you’ve been posting in the TS forums. How would you like to do a guest post for Copyblogger?” I was stunned. Copyblogger was quickly becoming one of the most successful blogs in the world, and I didn’t think I was anywhere close to being ready to write at that level. But I wasn’t going to miss the opportunity, either, so I agreed. A week later, my first post went up, and it was the highest traffic day in the history of my new blog. It wasn’t thousands of visitors, no. I still had a lot to learn about writing a really strong post. But it was an eye-opener. Brian’s help didn’t stop there. He gave me invaluable advice on how to grow my blog, and he started connecting me with power users who could help promote my posts on Digg and StumbleUpon. Within a few weeks, I was up to an average of 2,000 visitors per day, and I had hit the front page of Digg, bringing me 20,000 visitors within a few hours . I was euphoric, and there was no question Brian’s generosity with his connections and advice were the key ingredient to making it happen. So I started to wonder. “What if I did more of this?” I started to guest post wherever I could, and before long, I was getting so much traffic that my server started to crash, and I had to switch hosting companies. Performancing even nominated my blog for the Best Business/Money Blog in the world. I felt like a genius, like I’d discovered the cure for cancer or something. But then I started to look around. I wasn’t the only one guest blogging. People like Leo Babauta , Chris Garrett , Sonia Simone , and Dave Navarro were doing it too. And they were reaping incredible benefits. That’s when it occurred to me: the best way to build a relationship with anyone is to give them something of value. It’s the whole principle of reciprocity . It goes back not just to the work of Robert Cialdini, but to the good old Golden Rule. And what do popular bloggers need more than anything else? Great content. Why guest blogging is such a powerful strategy It’s hard to fathom when you’re a beginner, but running a huge blog is a lot of work. You have to come up with something brilliant to post every day, or you risk losing the attention of your audience. No vacations, no holidays, no calling in sick. You have a huge crowd of people waiting to hear what you are going to say next, and it had better be good. Many popular bloggers publish guest posts just because it gives them a day off. Someone else can take over the show, and they can take a moment to relax and regroup. It’s not laziness; it’s a creative necessity. And it’s also a big opportunity for you. Not only does guest posting give you a chance to connect with a huge audience, but it also makes you a sort of understudy. The blogger begins to care about you and how you’re progressing, and they’ll go out of their way to help you grow. The result? Lots and lots of traffic. Look into the history of almost any popular blogger, and you’ll find they guest posted for other popular blogs. In fact, go through the list of 30 bloggers to watch in 2010 , and over half of them have written for Copyblogger alone. It’s not a coincidence. It’s the way the blogosphere works. Everyone talks about building a relationship with your audience — and that’s critical. But few talk about building those relationships behind the scenes. Not sucking up or trying to exploit anyone, but making yourself useful and valuable. Becoming a contributor to their success is one of the best ways to build your own success. That makes guest blogging a smart strategy. Stay tuned and I’ll give you some quick tips for exactly how to do it. About the Author: Jon Morrow is the Associate Editor of Copyblogger. Get more from him on twitter .

3c3b757d57button.gif The Glass Ceiling, the Inner Circle, and the Key to Building a Popular Blog

See more here:
The Glass Ceiling, the Inner Circle, and the Key to Building a Popular Blog