How often do you publish blog posts and other content marketing material? If you find it hard to get information out there on a regular enough basis, this post may help. It’s about the approach I use for developing content on my blogs.
Before my family woke up this morning, I had written 3 blog posts, 2 of which are now published. I mention this, because I regularly hear intelligent, educated people telling me they “just can’t” write a few posts a week.
So, I decided to write this, my 4th post of the morning, to explain how I manage to do it; even though I am no brighter than they are and at least as busy!
Here are a few of the things I have in mind, when I write my blog posts:
They are not perfect, they are blog posts
I never aim for perfection. I aim to write something that is useful or at least interesting in some way. The pursuit of perfection is often called “the dream killer.” I agree. It is also pointless! It stops you in your tracks. Just write the best you can, when you can, and watch the results. Learn, adjust and move on.
They are not detailed guides on how to do something extremely complex, they are blog posts
I give my clients detailed answers to their unique challenges. However, in blog posts, I give my readers some ideas, answers and insights that are appropriate for the platform. My posts are not intended as a replacement to hiring professional help. They are intended to provide an additional resource. Don’t try and give consultations disguised as blog posts. It will take you forever and no one will thank you.
They are not novels, they are blog posts
Many bloggers insist on churning out 1000 / 1500 word blog posts. Most of my blog posts are between 400 and 700 words long. Some are under 100. Learn how to get your point across clearly, and in as few words as possible. This makes your content more information rich and less fluffy. My most popular posts are almost always the shorter ones.
Content marketing needs content. If you want to build your readership and for your blog to remain relevant, you need to turn up regularly. So, the next time you find yourself believing you can’t manage to write a few blog posts a week, make sure you not expecting too much from yourself. If I set myself some of the barriers other people do, I wouldn’t be able to produce regular content either.
Content Marketing tip: It’s all about them
If you want your content marketing to produce bankable results, it must connect with your prospective clients or customers. This means your content needs to focus on them and their world. It’s all about them!
Yes, you are a warm, wonderful human being, but I am going to let you into a secret: Your marketplace / readers are a lot less interested in you, than they are in their own challenges and problems!
So, if you want your content marketing to engage with them and convert them into clients, customers or passionate advocates, you need to put the spotlight on them and their world.
- Show them how to solve their problems.
- Show them how to overcome their challenges.
- Show them how to benefit from opportunities.
- Show them where the opportunities are, if they can’t already see them.
- …and most of all, show them you are focusing on their world!
Read the blog posts and marketing pages of most websites, and you will usually see pages and pages of information all about the author and their business. They provide what we call “the who and the why.” Who they are and why you should buy from them.
Content marketing: Help and inform your readers
Now, if you look at the most popular blogs, you see something completely different. You see pages and pages of information, which the author has written for the benefit of his or her readers. You see ALL successful bloggers offer their readers key information designed to; help the reader, make the reader’s life easier, guide the reader and solve the reader’s problems. They focus on providing great free content and then offer products and services aligned to their content.
So, their content marketing focuses on helping the reader for free, whilst offering paid-for products and services, designed to add value to their readers too,
Take a look at the sites I just mentioned and look at how they speak to their readers. Look how they offer solutions to their readers. Check out their tutorials and free guides. All their focus is aimed at helping and informing their readers. It’s all about the reader. It’s also super-effective!
How reader focused is your site? Are you focused on “the who and the why” or the needs, challenges and opportunities of your target readership?
Here’s a quick tip: If you think you are giving away waaaay too much free information to help your readers, in my experience you are probably on the right lines!
With content marketing, the content must come first
If you want to generate more advertising revenue and affiliate income form your blog, this post is just for you!
I visited a blog earlier, which had Google adwords inserted several times into the post I was hoping to read. The sidebar was auto-running video ads, which were extremely distracting. This combined to make the site look cheap and caused me to rethink the quality of the content. 5 seconds after arriving, I was on another site.
Successful content marketing is about putting the content first!
The second site also had ads (affiliate ads this time), but they did not get in the way of the content. The affiliate ads were also directly relevant to the blog’s content. My overall experience of the second blog was positive and it was little wonder that it seemed to be massively more popular than the first blog.
The blogs that make the most money are those that put the content first. As a result, they get more readers and can serve more page impressions and ad clicks.
Content marketing and ad revenue
If your monetization strategy is to generate income from advertising, this does not mean cramming as many ads as you can into every inch of available space. Your strategy needs numbers. It needs people to read, share and link to your blog. And remember, without those links, your blog will get very little search traffic.
People also tend to be very apprehensive about sharing links with their friends, which lead to sites that are lit up with ads and flashing banners, like a Vegas slot machine on acid!
Put the content first. Keep your blog posts targeted around a theme and then offer ads and products / services that are closely aligned with the content of your blog. It works for the most successful blogs in the world and can work for you too. Great examples of this approach include; Seth Godin’s blog, Danny Brown’s blog, Leo Laporte’s TWiT network
Internet marketing Tip: Monetizing your blog
Today’s internet marketing post is all about how to boost your income and avoid one of the most common Internet marketing errors.
Don’t turn your posts into ads
Many blogs read more like a series of self-obsessed commercials, than a series of useful posts or articles. It’s as if the blogger just can’t resist selling his or her services in every post.
Whilst it makes very good sense to occasionally blog directly about what you do or a special deal you may have running, pimping your wares too often will turn readers away. Remember, your blog needs to be all about them. If it’s all about you and your services, you will turn people away.
The whole point of content marketing (which is what blogging is), is to write unique content, that will be of value or interest (or both) to your target market. The way that content is monetized, is to turn your blog into a valuable resource for people who need the kind of products or services you offer. When your target market arrive at your blog, they should feel as if they have just found an Aladdin’s Cave of great information. This positions your blog as a valuable resource and YOU as their go-to guy or gal, when it comes to your area of expertise.
So, where’s the money?
The money comes, by making it easy for your readers to see the services or products you provide, as a natural part of their reading experience on your site. The thing is, although people love to buy things, they hate being sold to! So, instead of making each post read a little like a sales pitch, we use other methods, to transition them from being a reader with a need, to a reader with a need who feels they have just found the solution they are looking for.
Call to action boxes
If you look at the best converting sites in the world, they use a call to action box at the foot of their content, which asks the reader to do something. There are some massive benefits to this approach, which is why I use them on all my sites.
When you insert a call to action box (see below), into every post, you don’t need to force sales messages into your posts. Also, because the box is inserted at the foot of every post, people see it just after reading a post by you. If they have read the whole way through your post, you have clearly engaged them. This is EXACTLY where you want them to see your call to action.
On our blogs, we insert the following box below every post and people click the link all day, every day:
When people click that link, it takes them to the page on the blog, that markets our services. It works extremely well, even though it is not intrusive and does not impact the content of the post!
Relevant links
Having a page or pages on your site, which clearly market your products or services is essential. Not only can interested people go to your navigation bar and click them directly, you can also insert links to them from appropriate parts of appropriate posts. It’s called contextual linking. Although you need to be careful not to over use them, when you link directly from one of your posts to a marketing page, it can be extremely powerful. If, for example, you had just written a post about how your service helped a client, it makes sense to link to the page that markets that service.
Sidebar ads
One of the best kept secrets in Internet marketing is this: The fewer ads you run in your sidebar, the more money you make.
Is the sidebar of your blog a clean, uncluttered area where people can see a few, very relevant, ads? If it is and you already have decent traffic, you will know it works extremely well. Many blogs pack their sidebar with 8 or 10 affiliate ads. This, along with all the usual sidebar functions, can make it hard for people to focus on any one thing.
Find a small number of highly relevant, great quality advertising / affiliate partners. If you pick the right mix, you can make a very good income. Just ensure the ads are as closely linked to your blog content as possible.
This is just part one of a series of posts I will be producing on monetizing your blogs
Great points here. I hate it when you come across those websites that are just selling to you from the moment you hit the landing page. It just reminds me of those pushy sales assistants in stores, or those people that try and stop you in the middle of the street. It doesn’t work in the outside world and it definitely doesn’t work on-line.
15 Responses to Bloggers: How to write useful posts every day
Hi Jim,
Thank you for this blog updating my thoughts.
As a (super) regular reader of your blog posts I must admit that a full time blogger as you Jim has more chances to find his personal way to stay focused on his content. It can be as you notice about moment or due to action time.
And I definitely think that all is about organisation of your lifetime.
So I believe that for an entrepreneur that way is be a little more difficult. First because beginners are probably not as well organized as regular bloggers. And second, not everyone has writing capabilities.
I think the secret of creating good content is really niched in what do you expect from yourself, and what do you want from others to give you back.
Hi Yael,
You know I’m not a full time blogger, right? I run a very busy international marketing business. I only blog for several hours a week, that’s it!
This was the whole point of the post. Full time bloggers are very, very rare. Most of us fit blogging around the demands of our business and our families too.
Here are 3 short and simple tips to blog more effectively:
Be Useful
Stay On Topic
Make Your Point
Done…
Haha, I was just practicing writing a short blog post Jim… I think this is useful and its less than 20 words!
Point received — thanks for the tips
You’re hilarious!”they are blog posts” A message I badly need! I’m working on two writing projects these days; a blog and a manuscript. My goal is to be able to write awesome blogs FAST. Right now…. not so fast.
I also appreciate the tips Mark gave:
Be Useful
Stay On Topic
Make Your Point
You guys are great!
Lori
I’m definitely not a perfectionist, but I can’t help but make sure a blog post is just right before I click publish.
I view every piece of content as something the represents me.
My worse fear is that I’ll just be contributing to the noise instead of providing useful content.
How do you get over these issues without spending too much time?
Hi my friend. It’s ALWAYS a wise move to pause before you press the publish button. Here’s how I see the issue of adding something of value, rather than more noise.
When we decide to start blogging, we can only do whatever is our best. If we believe that we have something that others will find valuable, that’s worth publishing. If we feel we are throwing words together just to “show up”, that helps no one.
As you very rightly said, your work represents you. Make sure it’s worthy of you by trying to add something genuinely useful. Even if it’s an idea that has been discussed before, maybe you can put it in a way that more people will be able to understand? Show us your subject, according to the way David Spinks (or whoever) sees it. Let me see it through your eyes, so I can better understand the other guy’s perspective.
You are so right when calling perfectionism “the dream killer”. I had a former colleague who was a bit of a perfectionist, and he had an uncanny talent of taking any idea you presented to him and knocking all the energy out of it!
I am fortunate that in my current position spontaneity is encouraged and the results are always worthwhile. Even if I write a new blog post and acknowledge it’s not the best piece of writing in the world, it still fits into the bigger picture of the blog as a relevant element.
I’m taking over blogging for our company soon and my boss sent this wonderful wonderful link to me! I want to sleep with it under my pillow and inhale its essence at breakfast! It’s SO simple when you break it down. I am writing “They Are Blog Posts” onto a strip of paper and taping it to the bottom of my screen.
THANK YOU!
Chris, a new subscriber.
you are one of my favorite bloggers because of the lack of fluff. Good points on how to get those words flowing.