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9 Things to Do To Make Sure Your Next Blog Post is Read by More than Your Mom

Posted By Darren Rowse 3rd of September 2009 Blog Promotion, Featured Posts 0 Comments

mom-blog.jpgTwo days back I explored the myth that all you need to do is write great content on a blog for it to get readers and introduced the idea of ‘seeding’ content rather than ‘forcing’ it upon readers.

Today I want to take the ‘seeding’ idea a step further and give a few examples of ways that you can do it – and in the process hopefully grow your readership beyond your immediate family (not that there’s anything wrong with Mom reading your blog).

I should say that while this post contains 9 ways to promote a blog post – that I rarely use all of them at once. Keep in mind that the idea of ‘seeding’ is not about forcing things but rather it is about getting things going and then letting something organic happen. You might need to put a little more effort into things somewhere along the way to keep momentum going (like ‘watering the garden’ helps a seed to grow) but the idea isn’t for force things.

So without further ado – let me share a few of the techniques that I use to ‘seed’ content:

1. Tweet it

I find that one of the most effective ways to get a link to a new blog post ‘out there’ is simply to tweet it. Tweeting a link is quick and easy to do – and if you do it well it can be quite effective at both driving direct traffic to a blog post but also in starting other little viral events on other sites.

The effectiveness of this does depend a little on the size of your follower group – but other factors you can have a little more control over include:

  • timing your tweets to be during peak times when lots of people are on Twitter.
  • doing a followup tweet to your original one (I only do this on important posts and usually try to change the wording so as not to annoy people too much)
  • the wording of your tweet (give people a reason to click it)
  • making your tweet ‘ReTweetable’ by not making it too long (I keep these seeding tweets to under 120 characters to leave room for people to retweet them).

I find that when something does well on Twitter (and not every post will) that it can often trigger a secondary event on a site like Delicious. This in turn can trigger blogs to link to my posts or other social bookmarking sites to pick up links.

2. Facebook Status Updates (and other social media)

This is of course similar to Tweeting a link. I’ve not had as much success with Facebook as a promotional tool for my blogs but know of a few bloggers in different niches who find it to be more effective. Whether it sends loads of traffic or not it can be helpful in an overall strategy.

Similarly I sometimes also use other social media sites like LinkedIn’s status update if I feel that the content I’m promoting is better suited to other audiences. Again – it depends partly upon the size of your network on these sites but even a small but relevant network on these sites can trigger other bloggers to link up or secondary organic submissions on other social sites by those in your network. You never know what impact sharing a link in these sites can have until you do it.

3. Pitch it to another Blogger

Is the post you’re promoting relevant to the audience of another blog?

This is a question I’m always asking myself as I’m writing blog posts. As I write I jot down the names of other bloggers that have an audience that might find what I’m writing helpful. This means that when it comes time to promote the blog post I have a ready made list of people to shoot out an email to to let them know about my post.

I don’t send these emails out often, nor do I send them out to the same group of bloggers repeatedly – but if I genuinely think my post is of high quality and that the blogger will find it relevant I will.

Check out these suggestions on how to pitch other bloggers for some more tips on how to do this effectively.

4. Pitch it to another Twitter User

This is similar to pitching another blogger but can have a great impact as well. In fact I recently had a link from a blogger who both posted on his blog and tweeted the link and the Tweet converted much better for me in terms of traffic.

The key once again is to make sure that the link is relevant to the Tweeter and the type of thing that you’ve seen them sharing on twitter with others.

5. Share a Link in a ‘Signature’

Many bloggers have links to the front page of their blogs in both email signatures and forum signatures – but what about directing people to an individual post? There are a variety of tools out there that highlight latest posts (feedburner has one) and they make a lot of sense to me because you’re sending people to standalone articles that you’ve written rather than a sometimes confusing front page of a blog.

6. Bookmark it

This is one that I don’t tend to do myself these days but I know many bloggers who do so I’ll include it. It entails submitting your post to a site like Digg, StumbleUpon, Reddit, Delicious etc.

I don’t tend to do this any more as I find many of these sites have algorithms that penalize a site if it’s submitted by the same person over and over. What I do instead is occasionally shoot a link to another user of these sites in the hope that they’ll submit it for me. Having said this – I also find that as your traffic grows the submissions become more and more organic from regular readers so there’s less need for me personally to be involved in these types of ‘seedings’ in social bookmarkting sites.

7. Guest Posts

Another method that I’ve seen a number of bloggers using with real effect lately is to link to your important blog post in a guest post on someone else’s blog.

Most people who guest post on another blog tend to link back to the front page of their blog in the byline. This is a good general link to get but if you have an important post that you’ve written that relates to the guest post you’re writing you should find a way to incorporate a link to that post – either as the byline link or if the blogger allows it – within the blog post itself.

8. Give readers an easy way to share it

Hopefully with some of the above techniques you’ve got a few readers over to your blog – now you want them to share it with others.

There are many ways to make your blog post ‘sharable’. I tend to use a combination of templated techniques as well as a few custom ones that I add to posts once on posts that I think will do well on social media sites.

  • Templated techniques – there are many ways to build social media buttons into your blog. There are heaps of tools and plugins that will do this for you. The key in my experience is not to have too many buttons/options but to choose just a few that relate well to your audience.
  • Custom techniques – if I notice that one of my posts is starting to do well on Twitter or Digg or some other social media site I generally will either add an extra button to a post or add a text link pointing people to where they can tweet or digg the post. I find that these more obvious little additions to a post can often tip it over the edge to a viral traffic event.

9. Newsletters

This is a way that I often ‘tip’ posts that are doing OK over the edge into a viral traffic event. It usually works like this:

A – I write a post that I think MIGHT do well as a viral post

B – I time the publishing of that post for a Thursday morning – an update goes out via RSS to my subscribers

C – I use some of the above techniques to get the post seeded (Twitter, Facebook etc)

D – I wait until the post is submitted to Digg and then add a Digg button to the post (or some other social bookmarking site)

E – I then send out a newsletter to my list including a prominent link to the post

What I find is that without the last step (sending a newsletter) the post can do quite well – but when I send the newsletter I quite often see a ‘tipping point’ with the post and it’ll go viral on multiple social media sites at once on the back of the extra traffic that I’ve been able to send to the traffic via the newsletter.

2 Final Words of Advice

Let me finish with two words that I think are key to much of the above – persistence and relationships.

1. Persistence – There’s a real need for persistence in seeding content. Much of what I’ve described above are things that I’ve been doing for years and they’ve only become more effective the longer that I’ve done them.

My experience of finding readers is that it is all about momentum. In the early days to find just a handful of readers can be a real challenge – the above methods may not bring thousands of people through the door – however the 10 than they do bring in on your first day could lead to 100 next month which could lead to the thousands in the coming year.

You may get lucky and your seed may grow into something big in the early days of your blog – but even small results can grow slowly into big things over time. Each reader that you bring into your loyal readership is important because they have a network of their own that they could help spread word of your blog to.

2. Relationships – The other key to much of the above is to be as relational as possible. Much of the above relies upon people sharing your posts with others once you alert them to the existence of your posts. So put aside regular time to grow your network, to build a presence on sites like Twitter, to build trust and influence on other sites outside of your blog – this networking can pay off in a big way over the long term. Just do keep these other social networking sites in perspective – they’re not the main game themselves but should be used to build up your home base.

About Darren Rowse
Darren Rowse is the founder and editor of ProBlogger Blog Tips and Digital Photography School. Learn more about him here and connect with him on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.
Comments
  1. I’ve always been leery of Facebook, probably because I don’t really understand how to use it effectively for marketing.

    5/100

  2. This is such a great set of guidelines – I have tried lots of time to launch an educational website – some really take off, others seem to die a slow and painful death – and I never seem to be able to work out quite why – I will see if your ideas about Twitter boost things along!

  3. I’m using some of these strategies but there is always more I can do. I use RedGage extensively because this social bookmarking site parallels Google’s emphasis on universal search. It also allows and encourages cross-posting – utilizing multiple forms of bookmarking to promote similar content. My blog feed automatically creates a Tweet and Twitter in turn automatically updates my status on Facebook. I frequently get visitors and comments via the resultant Facebook status update.

  4. nice post,it is helpfully to develop and make a blog more quality.thanks daren..

  5. Thanks for sharing tips to make my blog popular. I am surely going to use all 9 tips for my blog.

  6. As You mentioned at the bottom, relationship is the key. Social Media makes C2C (customer to customer) business possible.

    Good Article Daren

  7. If you quit your day job which I’d like to do how much can a full time blogger (average) expect to earn?

    Dorothy from grammology
    grammology.com

    Help I’m old and I love blogging….

  8. Hey im a first time reader and found that your videos are great. Keep posting like this and ill tune in all the time. I just added your rss.

    Thanks
    Lucas

  9. I think guest posting is the best way to get traffic bumps that are really significant. Then you just need a great system to capture the new traffic…

  10. Great article Darren. I would recommend one other social media
    option. That is groups in Linkedin. I have found alot of success in
    getting traffic from those groups. My linkedin site is=>http://www.Linkedin.com/in/BrianJCody56
    Check out my blog article on how to become a leader on Twitter=>http://bit.ly/7fZZA Feel free to comment and follow
    Of course RT article. Thanks

  11. These are great tips. Sometimes it just gets so frustrating that you want to just throw the computer and yell “uncle!”. But then there are posts like this one that give you one more thing try and one more “seed” to plant.

    http://www.twitter.com/krenee76

  12. This is a great post with some very good advice and I like to tweet this but I can’t find the tweet button. Anyone?

  13. Darren,

    Excellent advice. I hadn’t thought of the newsletter idea.

    You and I share a similar mindset concering the organic approach. Letting go into the flow is the best thing that you can do. Once you’ve made a solid post people will definitely find it.

    In my experience the less I’ve pushed my blog the higher the readership. Force always negates.

    As for relationships, that’s what business is all about, be it online or offline. People will help, trust and financially support someone who they have a great relationship with.
    Get rid of the competitive mindset. Try to make friends with everyone you meet. This is common sense stuff which is often lost in the numbers game that so many bloggers get caught up in.

    RB

  14. Hey Darren,

    This was great advice. I just started my blog and I hadn’t even though about including it on my facebook and twitter. I hope I can get my website and blog up and running, and I think your advice will help a lot.

    Thanks!

  15. i am trying to use twitter , still learning

  16. Thanks for writing about blogs. I wrote my master’s thesis on mommy blogs and was able to use one of your articles. You can find the thesis here if you’re interested in reading it:

    http://michelleglauser.blogspot.com/2009/09/yes-you-may-read-my-thesis-but-you-dont.html

  17. Best part is that if the content is well-written, it will spread viral and people will naturally want to read it. It’s not easy attaining that level.

  18. These are great ideas. I had never thought of creating a list of other bloggers and emailing them periodically. I will definitely try that! Guest blogging is already on my list as well. I have found that your tip about being persistent may be the best tip of all. I have noticed that the more value I add to my site, the more ideas that I implement, the more traffic I get. Persistence and implementation are key!

  19. social media has its limits one can’t live on social media alone there is no altrenative to organic traffic and the only way you get it is through good content.

  20. The problem with the internet as a whole is that in order to be successful at blogging you need to do 3 things,
    1. Write a blog about blogging
    2. Write comments in other people’s blogs about blogging that don’t really offer anything, but don’t sound too much like spam and then most importantly
    3. Spam with your blog, http://confdence.co.cc
    Ah, google if you know that people hate spamming, then why do you stack the deck so that people have to spam to succeed? Oh yeah, my mom is the only one that reads my stuff so far.

  21. LoveYourBlog says: 09/12/2009 at 5:04 am

    Darren,

    Great post. I agree with what you said about newsletters, RSS feeds, etc under #9. However, it sounds like you are doing more of the actual footwork than is necessary. Everything under #9 can be automated with a service like AWeber – http://www.aweber.com.

    Totally worth the $20!! Love it. :)

  22. Well said! Great info. I’ve found that once you get the initial readers (who like your content and view you as the expert) they naturally refer / share / repost your articles.

    ——————-
    Download my book Zyxtology and watch my E-course on the science of being seen and becoming the last word for free at http://www.Zyxtology.com

  23. Yes, Darren you are right. But I just got myself suspended in Twitter, so I don’t think Im going to tweet anything, soon. :D
    (it’s weird how I never really tweet, and yet my account suspended there).

    But I agree about guest blogger. I am trying to pitch this myself.Off course the problem always time, time and time. Everyday I log on to the net with bunch of to do lists. But most of the time only 50% success rate. It’s really frustrating how we kept distorted ourselves during online since we kept getting so many new and useful information, while forgetting about the most basic things to do.

    Money Making Blogspot

  24. Your tips are very good.
    I’d love to use more of them but it’s not that easy as a hobby blogger.

  25. carol says: 09/12/2009 at 9:28 pm

    great post it really helped me … thx
    http://www.therakebackmafia.com

  26. The whole point of social bookmarking is to share links with your friends — not promote your own work over and over again. To suggest that people bookmark their own posts is pointing them down the wrong path. Anyone who uses Digg, StumbleUpon, Google Bookmarks, etc. can tell you that someone who only posts their own stuff, isn’t someone they’ll continue to pay attention to very long.

    Promote your work in other ways, so that your readers will bookmark you and it will go a LOT farther.

  27. Great article. Your comment on your mother reminds me of an old post I made in June. Check it out. It’s really short. Hope you like it! http://blog.idiaz.org/?p=9

  28. Great info! Love the post but the best part to me was indeed the picture picked for this article. lol love it!

  29. Darren,

    Great post. I agree with what you said

  30. Great tips for a newbie blogger. Thank you

    http://www.writingbugs.blogspot.com/

  31. I don’t have enough followers on Twitter to make an impact with visitors if I tweet my site.

    I’ve tried to the social bookmark sites but that hasn’t brought in any traffic.

    I’ll keep working hard at it.

  32. Thanks for this great advice. I am looking to add a blog to my site and this post has certainly given me some valuable pointers.

  33. this is great advice and tips, i’m gonna bookmark it.

  34. love the post gr8 help thx

  35. This has been a very helpful post. I had technical difficulties with my site which has caused a rapid decline in my readership (which was low to begin with) – I have been working the facebook angle – twitter confuses me – anyone have any advice for a beginner who is a bit overwhelmed by all of this?

    http://www.designformenmag.com

  36. Thanks Darren, I’m currently working on ways to generate more organic traffic but have done very well on StumbleUpon. I have been using Twitter/Facebook but the jury is still out on that one.

    There’s still quite a few of your seeding tips that I have to work into the mix. Let’s see what the next 3 months looks like.

  37. Good article. I really can identify with the persistence and the relationships.

  38. Fabulous ! This is a checklist that every blogger should recite every morning. Thanks.

  39. Darren

    Thanks for the tips, always good when starting out to understand what can assist in driving traffic to our blogs.
    Thanks as always

    Tom

  40. Thank you for the tips Darren. I tend to get more traffic from social media and search engines rather than twitter and Facebook. Concerning Twitter, I don’t have a lot of follower, and I don’t follow that much people, that’s certainly the reason why traffic from twitter isn’t very productive for me.

    I tend to prefer using various social media networks to get more exposures and by the same occasion : traffic.

    I really like this checklist, and still working with your ebook 31DBBB which I really like.

    Best regards,
    Benjamin Cip

  41. Great info, I’ve actually put that same myth to the test and although there is some truth behind it most of it boils down hard work and understanding your market. Blogging is difficult to grasp for those that fail to understand their market and consumer base. That’s why I advise anyone that hasn’t already done so to read up and research what people want to read about before posting a blog or article. Thanks for the info keep em coming!

  42. Love the photo in this post. Great tips. I’ve been trying to Tweet my posts during peak hours as well. I do a lot of work late at night, problem is, my target audience isn’t on Twitter. So sometimes I post those in the morning.

  43. Thanks for the post, very helpful.

  44. I have been exploring ways to build traffic through the use of Blogging and other Social Media. Great stuff here, but for most small business people it requires a full time person just to handle the social media.

  45. for me tweeter its still the best

  46. Thanks for the tip. I will try this and hopefully it works well for my blog.

  47. Thanks for these great tips… Although I must say that for me, Facebook seems to work much better than Twitter…

  48. Thanks for the great tips to keep in mind as I create blog posts and build my online brand!

    Best,
    Christine Elisabeth von Malsen Hueber

  49. I think that the two most important things you can do are to

    (1) Point out why your blog is relevant to the *readers* of the blog from which you are requesting a link; and

    (2) Make a brief request, that is easily scanned, with a link to detailed information about why your blog has value.

    In this way, you are minimizing the amount of time you require from the blogger, and providing them with all of the information that they need to make an educated decision. They can drill down if they wish.

    Alan Jordan
    http://www.SalesAndJobs.com (Blog)
    http://www.Monbed.com (Children’s book)
    http://www.GreatJobInterviews.com (Customizable book.)

  50. Thank you for sharing. In fact, I was just starting a blog 2days ago.
    In my eyes, the first way is simple and effective for most people.

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