marzo 10, 2010

Gestiona tu Reputación Online: monitoriza (y III)eTc :: El blog de Marketing en Español

monitorización
Después de un tiempo he conseguido ponerme con esta tercera y última parte sobre un aspecto importante a la hora de abordar la Gestión de la Reputación Online, que es la monitorización. En el primero de la serie vimos una aproximación al concepto de Reputación Online; mientras que en el segundo abordamos algunos consejos a la hora de medir, algunas ideas sobre qué se puede medir y cómo optimizar el entorno disponible.

Así que hoy nos centramos ya en el meollo de la cuestión, que queda recogido de manera muy visual en la presentación que acompaña al post (tal como hicimos en el anterior), porque creo que es la mejor manera de explicar lo mejor de cada herramienta. Como ejemplo he utilizado los resultados de Innosfera, un evento mensual sobre innovación, promovido por la UOC, y que organizo junto a Javier Velilla y María Jesús Alonso.

En primer lugar, debemos plantearnos si utilizar las herramientas de pago disponibles (en ocasiones si contamos con presupuesto suficiente es recomendable), ya que facilitan la tarea de organizar todo en un lugar, obtener gráficos, etc. Existen muchas, muy especializadas en el Mercado anglosajón, como Radian6, Trackur (recientemente ha sacado una versión gratuita que os aconsejo probar), BuzzStream, Syntesio, Visible Measures…, y nos aburriríamos mencionándolas todas.


Como comentaba, tienen una importante carencia a la hora de monitorizar la web en español. En nuestro país existen también interesantes opciones como Smmart (de Cierzo Development), MambaIQ, la recientemente lanzada “Webrunner 2.0”, una herramienta que he probado y que es muy interesante debido a la amplitud de sitios que monitoriza y a su foco en la web en español.

Por otra lado, tenemos multitud de herramientas gratuitas disponibles en la web, que como tales demuestran sus carencias y no son perfectas. Sin embargo, la combinación de las idóneas nos proporciona excelentes resultados. Para optimizarlas, veremos una selección de aquéllas que muestran resultados aceptables y que permiten la suscripción a las búsquedas de los resultados mediante RSS.

1.- Elige tus “keywords” o listado de palabras clave que te permitan acudir a cada herramienta para realizar la búsqueda y gestionar la suscripción. Algunas ideas pueden ser:

  • Directivos
  • Empresa, filiales…
  • Marcas, nombres de productos, servicios…
  • Slogan (“la chispa de la vida”…)
  • Competencia
  • Sector
  • Proveedores, clientes, socios, etc.

2.- Gestionar los resultados en lectores de RSS:

Como hemos visto lo importante es seleccionar herramientas que permitan suscribirse a los resultados de la búsqueda mediante RSS. Herramientas de lectura hay muchísimas, sin embargo, las más recomendables son:

  • Google Reader: si creamos una cuenta específica para lo que queremos monitorizar puede ser una interesante herramienta. Aunque visualmente mucho más pobre que otras.
  • Netvibes: una excelente herramienta para agrupar en un solo lugar y mediante widgets los resultados de cada herramienta que utilicemos.
  • Feedly: una herramienta también muy visual y que tiene una ventaja, nos va discriminando los resultados de las fuentes que vayamos considerando menos relevantes.
  • Yahoo! Pipes: uno de los problemas a los que nos vamos a hacer frente es la repetición de resultados, ya que muchas herramientas muestra resultados similares. Una adecuada gestión de Pipes nos permite optimizar los resultados y evitar repeticiones.

monitorización2
3.- Herramientas:

Para llevar un orden a la hora de gestionarlas y controlarlas, una interesante división sería:

  • Alertas de Noticias
  • Blogs
  • Comentarios y conversaciones
  • Social Media
  • Marcadores
  • Twitter

3.1.- Alertas de noticias: en este campo Google News Alerts es sin duda la gran referencia. Nos permite recibir alertas al mail o al lector de feeds (RSS), así como introducir otros parámetros de interés como frecuencia, tipo, longitud del mensaje, etc.

3.2.- Blogs:

  • Google Blog Search: nos permite ordenar por relevancia o por fecha, así como establecer parámetros de búsqueda de publicación de resultados (última hora, últimas 12 horas…)
  • BlogPulse: una excelente herramienta gratuita de Nielsen. En portada ofrece resultados centrados en EEUU, por lo que la parte que nos interesa es el buscador. Ofrece interesante opciones como gráficos, búsqueda en conversaciones, búsquedas por url concreta o por fechas…
  • IceRocket: otra de las recomendables a la hora de realizar búsquedas en blogs (aunque también permite buscar en la web, noticias, en Twitter…) Podemos realizar búsquedas por fecha y por idioma, además en la opción “Results Trend”, nos muestra un gráfico sobre la evolución del termino elegido.
  • Twingly: muy útil para buscar en blogs y en Twitter. Permite además agregarte la búsqueda a la barra del navegador, crear una alerta por mail o incluir un widget en tu blog con los resultados. Para realizar búsquedas en Twitter es muy interesante ya que amplia los resultados en el tiempo a mucho más de un mes como suele ser habitual en otros buscadores de Twitter.
  • SocialMention: quizá una de las mejores para realizar búsquedas en la web social, no sólo en blogs. Sin embargo, la incluyo en este epígrafe porque es una de las que muestra un mayor número de resultados en blogs, así como otras opciones relacionadas con la búsqueda como “top keywords”, “top users”, “sentiment”…

3.3.- Comentarios y conversaciones: aquí analizamos las herramientas que nos permiten buscar en los comentarios de los blogs o en foros, en éstos últimos debemos emplear varias herramientas ya que ninguna muestra unos resultados óptimos.

  • BlogPulse.
  • Google Blogs.
  • Backtype: específica para búsquedas de comentarios. No aporta muchos resultados, pero como complemento es interesante. Se ha renovado y también muestra resultados de Twitter.
  • BoardReader: herramienta que nos permite realizar búsquedas en foros.
  • Omgili: al igual que la anterior centrada en búsquedas en foros.
  • BoardTracker.

3.4.- Social Media: aunque herramientas hay muchas y muy útiles, hemos elegido sólo aquellas que permiten la suscripción a los resultados mediante RSS o alertas.

  • SocialMention.
  • El buscador de FriendFeed: muy interesante, ya que nos muestra resultados de todos los servicios de la web social que añaden los usuarios a sus perfiles.
  • Samepoint: muy útil para realizar búsquedas muy completas, ya que incluye resultados de LinkedIn, Facebook, Wikipedia, etc. Un consejo, tiende a mostrar resultados de EEUU, por lo que si introducís una única palabra hacerlo entre comillas para focalice en España (Ej.: “innosfera”)
  • Ubervu: realiza búsquedas muy amplias, muestra gráficos… Permite la suscripción a los resultados mediante alertas de correo electrónico.

3.4. Marcadores: me parece destacable incluir este apartado aparte, ya que Delicious es una interesante herramienta para analizar la repercusión de tus menciones, cómo te etiqueta la gente, quién lo hace…

3.5.- Twitter: sin duda Twitter merece una mención aparte, por su implicación en la conversación, en la web en tiempo real… Entorno a Twitter tenemos miles y miles de herramientas y probablemente mejores de las que he seleccionado; en este caso hemos ampliado a otras que no posibilitan suscripción RSS, pero que sí nos permiten extraer datos interesantes de la conversación.

  • Search.twitter.com: permite la suscripción de resultados por RSS y la búsqueda por idioma.
  • Twazzup: a pesar de que no permite suscripción, es muy interesante porque nos muestra imágenes, noticias, usuarios… que tienen más relación con el término introducido.
  • TweetVolume: Nos muestra gráficamente el volumen de resultados en Twitter de una palabra concreta, permite comparativas con varias palabras.
  • Backtweets: una herramienta muy útil, ya que nos permite introducir una URL y ver qué tweets lindan hacia ella, aunque en el texto no aparezca una palabra clave que busquemos. Permite suscribirnos a los resultados mediante RSS.
  • Trendistic: para analizar evolución de menciones a una palabra en concreto en el tiempo. Nos muestra resultados de la última semana, aunque en su home sí que analizan mucho más en el tiempo.
  • TweetBeep: nos permite recibir en el mail una alerta cada vez que se menciona una palabra que seleccionamos en Twitter.

Ahora toca ponerse en marcha. Gestionar todos los resultados hacia nuestro lector de RSS y tener en un solo lugar toda la información disponible, de manera que no tengamos que acudir a cada herramienta cada vez que queramos buscar información sobre algo en concreto. Os dejo a continuación la presentación:

_______________________________________________________________________________

territoriocreativoRoberto Carreras trabaja como consultor de comunicación 2.0, además es profesor colaborador en la Universidad Antonio de Nebrija. Puedes seguirle en su blog, en twitter y en sus aportaciones en Yorokobu.

marzo 9, 2010

3 Ways Location Will Change SEOHubSpot’s Inbound Internet Marketing Blog

marzo 7, 2010

WordPress SEO: How to 100% optimize your blog SEOHow To Make My Blog

Scribe WordPress SEO

Doing WordPress SEO is not difficult, even Google says that WordPress is one of the best blogging platforms for search engines optimization. There is so much competition though so it is important to optimize your blog SEO to attract organic traffic from search engines.

WordPress SEO

I got an email about the new Scribe blog SEO software because I am user of the Thesis Theme. Scribe SEO was created by the same team as Thesis and I just had to check it out.

Scribe is basically a WordPress SEO plugin that helps work with the blog on-page search engine optimisation. Scribe sits in your blog post writing screen and allows you to analyse the blog SEO of the post by clicking the “Analyze” button.

Clicking Analyze brings up a pop-up screen which looks something like the screenshot above (analysis above is for the “What diet is your blog on” post):

I got a low grade of 51% for that post. Scribe looked at following things to decide the grade. The first tab is SEO Score:

Title

  • how many characters
  • how many words
  • does it contain primary keyword
  • does it contain primary key word at the beginning

Description

  • how many characters
  • does it contain primary keyword
  • does it contain primary key word towards the beginning

Body

  • how many words does the body contains
  • what is the keyword density of the primary keyword
  • how many hyperlinks are there in the post
  • how many hyperlinks at the beginning
  • what is the flesch reading score and level

Out of all these, it tells me which ones I am doing fine and which ones I have to fix. In this post the title doesn’t contain the keyword at the beginning, neither does the description, the keyword “blog” exceeds the maximum of keyword density, and there are no links at the beginning of the post. That is why I only got score 51%.

SEO Keyword Analysis

Second tab is Keyword Analysis which basically analyses primary and secondary keywords and phrases in your copy. It also lets you know what is the keyword density of each of the keywords.

Third tab is Change Keywords which tells you to use more of the keyword throughout the text if you want to make that keyword a primary one or use less of it if you want to make it a secondary keyword.

The Tag tab tells me the list of semantically relevant key phrases that I should use in the article.

SERP tab shows me how my listing will look in Google or in another search engine result page.

Blog SEO Best Practices

Last Tab is called SEO Best Practices. This is a text that gives me FAQ and a definition of terms used in the other tabs. It tells what the optimal length of the title, optimal length of the description and the body is, best practices around how many links per how many words, why the Flesch reading ease is important and so on. It tells how the score is calculated.

I analysed some of my best ranking articles and how to install WordPress post has a score of 65% and my best WordPress plugins post has a score of 87%! There is no “analyse all” button so I do not know which of my posts has the best score.

Scribe WordPress SEO plugin has been updated several times since I’ve been using it so it is good to know that it will be kept as current as the Thesis theme is.

All in all an interesting product that can help you take care of the generic on-page WordPress SEO and in the long run hopefully increase your search engine traffic.

It is important to note that on-page factors are only a small factor of the whole blog SEO so getting a lot of social media mentions, getting great links and having a keyword rich domain name are still the factors that will give you the most search engine success.

This post has been optimized to 100% for WordPress SEO and blog SEO according to Scribe so will be interesting to see how Google takes it.

See more:

  1. Reader comment: counting keyword density and worrying about SERP’s
  2. Add Keywords To Optimize SEO When Writing Blog Posts
  3. 7 Steps To Keyword Optimize Your Blog Posts
  4. How Google PageRank affects my search engine rankings and traffic
  5. Link internally to increase blog page views, improve usability and Google rankings

marzo 2, 2010

7 Must Have WordPress Plugins For Every Blog

Basic wordpress plugins every wordpress blog should must have.

febrero 25, 2010

El Blog de Google para América Latina: América Latina y la penetración de Internet

Shared by Germán Echeverría

América Latina y la penetración de Internet

febrero 11, 2010

Why Brands are Becoming Media

at globe imageBrian Solis is a principal at new media agency FutureWorks, and author of the upcoming book, Engage. You can connect with him on Twitter or Facebook.

One of the greatest challenges I encounter today is not the willingness of a brand to engage, but its ability to create. When blueprinting a social media strategy, enthusiasm and support typically derails when examining the resources and commitment required to produce regular content.

Indeed, we are programing the social web around our brand hub, which requires a consistent flow of engaging and relevant social objects. Social objects are the catalysts for conversations — online and in real life — and they affect behavior within their respective societies.

They are our tweets, our Flickr photos, YouTube videos, Facebook updates and events, Delicious links, FourSquare check-ins, and blog posts.

But once we introduce a social object, we must be ready to back it up with additional relevant content, and create a publishing calendar programmed specifically for each network on which we maintain a presence.


Brands Become Their Media

laptop megaphone imageThere’s a saying in theater: A big part of acting is reacting. This is especially true when we consider how many individuals, brands, and organizations engage on the web today. Instead of seeking inspiration and direction from those around us however, we simply react to activity, which may or may not benefit us in the long run.

The democratization of publishing and the equalization of influence allows us to create and connect with a wider reach. Everything starts with a mission, and is fortified by the content we create.

Among the most valuable resources we procure through dedicated publishing is good will, social capital, and influence. It comes at a price however: The cost of production, distribution, and support. In the end, you get out what you put in. The investment represents time, money, creativity, and passion.

Thus, we not only become our media — through production and engagement, we can become influential.


Productive Social Media Must Be Earned

While establishing a presence is elementary, captivating audiences is artful. In the near future, brands and organizations will create new or augment existing roles for editors and publishers to create timely, relevant, and captivating content on all social media channels. This work is in addition to the other reactive and proactive social media campaigns that are already in progress. A strategic editorial calendar should blend video, audio, imagery, text, updates, and other social objects and networks to reach, inspire, and galvanize communities.


Earned, Paid, and Owned Media

In media, there are several channels that populate and shape perception — earned, paid, and owned media. Each requires a dedicated management system that actively creates, monitors and stimulates strategic movement.

Recently, Sean Corcoran, an analyst at Forrester Research, published a detailed post that describes the differences between earned, paid and owned. He clarifies the roles for brands who undertake the responsibility of embracing new media. Dave Fleet, a thought leader in new media and public relations, also visualized Corcoran’s thoughts through a series of graphics that represent the social media ecosystem.

As Corcoran points out in his recent report:

“Increasingly, interactive marketers are being asked to manage a wide range of paid and unpaid marketing communication —- despite the fact that many marketing departments are still organized around traditional paid marketing channels. All types of online media (whether ‘earned,’ ‘owned,’ or ‘paid’) can play specific roles in meeting marketers’ objectives —- especially when seamlessly working together. To find the right balance between these types of media, marketers should take stock of their resources, listen for the impact of earned media, look for opportunities to shift short-term paid media to the role of catalyst, and begin to build out a solar system of long-term owned media touchpoints.”

In other words, paid, earned and owned media require thoughtful programming and targeted distribution and must be linked to a systematic review of behavior and activity that surrounds each object. And, the analysis of activity and ultimately the end result should play a monumental role in the creation of future publishing and social activation.

Corcoran uses the word “touchpoint,” which by standard definition, refers to any point of contact between a buyer and a seller. Touchpoint is part of the greater opportunity here. But more importantly, these touchpoints require direction and the establishment of a path that offers a complete experience — a beginning, a middle, an end, and a reward.

These experiences are definable by paid, earned, and owned media.

New media necessitates a collaboration between all teams involved in creating and distributing content, including advertising, interactive, communications, brand, and marketing — with an editorial role connecting the dots. We are competing for attention and our success is dependent on our ability to not compete against each other. Producing content and lobbing it over the firewall to an “audience” will only confuse communities. Therefore, we are obligated to build pipelines that carry strategic communications, each with calculated intents, targets and outcomes.

If we examine the differences between earned, owned, and paid, we can visualize necessary programming and dedicated channels for each.

Owned media is essentially that which we control. If we designed the object, we own the content within the object. Most likely, we also own (or lease) the distribution channels that present these objects to our target communities. We do not however, control the impression and perception of our objects. We lose that control at the point of distribution.

For example, in addition to standard web pages, social media presences contribute to our portfolio of owned media including Twitter accounts, Facebook Fan Pages, Blogs, YouTube channels, etc. By creating presences in the communities where our customers, prospects, partners, and influencers congregate and collaborate, we can lay the foundation to contribute “earned” social objects of value.

Social hubs are also gaining prominence in social media plans as brands weigh options for directing traffic. The creation of strategic landing pages can extend the rich, interactive experience within social networks (channels which we partially own) to pages we do own. This shapes the experience in a way that maintains interactivity and targeted options for action. I’m not necessarily recommending the creation of microsites, unless it’s warranted in the overall program. But a bridge that connects the social experience to a valuable destination is important.

Forrester’s Corcoran recommends that brands create a “solar system” of owned media. However, I suggest that brands instead create a focused ecosystem of media that establishes presences where their communities are already active — a brand or organization-specific social media ecosystem. This requires research. In the process, we uncover not only locations that require our engagement, but also how, where, when and to what extent to participate. We just may find that the given locations for social profiles represent only part of the many opportunities rife within the Conversation Prism.

Paid media represents the visibility we purchase, such as display ads, paid search, and sponsorships. When paired with owned and earned media programs, paid media can complement, reinforce, and polish a brand’s voice, directives, mission, and stature. While many argue over the future and fate of advertising, what’s clear is that online paid presences can benefit initiatives where action and experiences are defined and promoted through the click path. Current trends reflect a shift away from branding programs and place emphasis on sparking desired activity, empowering viewers and their social graph to share in the experience all in ways that measure the cost per action.

Earned media is the result of our owned, paid, and participatory media programs and is reflected in the blog posts, tweets, status updates, comments, and ultimately actions of our consumers, peers, and influencers. Earned media is linked to owned media campaigns as well as proactive initiatives that attempt to incite viral and word-of-mouth activity. Garnered visibility is also tied to communications and public relations programs as they continually seek to gain the attention of reporters, bloggers, analysts, and influencers who can drive awareness and behavior.

This isn’t a one way street however. Success is absolutely conditional on the techniques and methodologies that inspire dedicated programs focused on outreach, relations, and hopefully the engendering of productive and mutually beneficial relationships. Crowd-powered visibility also merits an official and devoted listening and response initiative to ensure that each respective community aligns with the mission.

Participatory media is an extension of earned and owned media. It takes the shape of a hosted hub where brand representatives and our communities can interact and collaborate. Good examples of this are Dell’s IdeaStorm and Starbucks’ “My Idea” network, which resemble branded wikis designed to elicit responses and establish community-focused governances. Participatory media equalizes the balance of power, providing a dedicated platform the gives voice to the consumer and a channel for their ideas.

Sponsored media is a new category that fuses owned, paid, and earned media. Sponsored media is championed by companies like Izea, Ad.ly, and Twittad, among others, and is creating a new medium for packaging messages through trusted voices within highly visible and social channels. Sponsored media can take the form of paid tweets, blog posts, appearances, and featured objects on targeted profiles. And, whether you agree or disagree with the idea, the reality is that it works, and seems to benefit all parties involved, from the brand, to the paid affiliates, to their communities. In fact, Forrester’s Josh Bernoff and Sean Corcoran shared their thoughts on why sponsored media is worthy of consideration.

Sponsored objects fuse earned, paid, and owned media, as technically: 1) The messages are owned; 2) The voices are paid, and; 3) With more thoughtful approaches, the responses within targeted communities can inspire a positive wave of earned media.

Disclosure: My company works with Ted Murphy, Founder/CEO of izea.com.


Influence

at globe imageAs media, brands earn prominence and hopefully influence as rewards for contributing meaningful content. On Twitter, brands can earn legions of loyal and responsive followers, who in turn become brand advocates and ambassadors, extending the messages, mission and purpose of the brand to their followers as well. On Facebook, brands can cultivate vibrant and dedicated communities where interaction inspires increased responses — each reverberating across new social graphs. On Ustream and YouTube, we can earn global audiences of viewers who tune in to watch our programming and interact with brand representatives in a live community that spills over other social networks. And of course, our blog is more important than we may realize. Through our posts, we can establish a strong alliance of subscribers who hope to learn new things and participate in the discussion of a brand’s future.

As Tom Foremski points out, we have the ability to earn noteworthy, equal, and in some cases, greater influence than those authorities whom we’ve relied on over the years to help us reach greater audiences and communities. As influence is equalized, our ability to earn presence and relationships is derived from how we program, manage, and participate in all forms of media. And, it is through a balance of media and engagement that we also establish the foundation for affinity. People align with movements they can believe in, and it is the human, intellectual, and financial investment in genuine content that defines experiences, and hopefully one day earns the significance your brand deserves.


More business resources from Mashable:


- The Maturation of Social Media ROI
The 10 Stages of Social Media Business Integration
HOW TO: Use Social Media to Connect with Other Entrepreneurs
HOW TO: Implement a Social Media Business Strategy
9 Great Document Collaboration Tools for Teams
HOW TO: Choose a News Reader for Keeping Tabs on Your Industry
5 Advanced Social Media Marketing Strategies for Small Businesses

Images courtesy of iStockphoto, cogal, YanC, Juanmonino


Reviews: Delicious, Facebook, Flickr, Foursquare, Twitter, YouTube, iStockphoto, ustream

Tags: blog, blogging, brand, branding, business, facebook, List, Lists, MARKETING, small business, social media, social media marketing, social networking, twitter, ustream, youtube

septiembre 21, 2009

Top 5 Business Blogging Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

blog imageThis post originally appeared on the American Express OPEN Forum, where Mashable regularly contributes articles about leveraging social media and technology in small business.

Business blogging can be exceptionally rewarding. When done correctly, a successful blog can bring attention to your business, can attract new customers, and can turn your current customer base into the type of fans that companies like Apple, Netflix, and Ben and Jerry’s have: people who will not only buy your product or service, but evangelize it to their peers. Of course, like anything, there is a right way to go about starting a business blog and a wrong way.

Creating a blog for your small business isn’t easy; it requires hard work and the ability to think creatively about your work. But if you avoid the five big mistakes laid out in this post, your chances of building a successful business blog will be much better.


Mistake #1: Treating Your Blog Like a Press Center


The number one mistake that business bloggers make is to treat their blog as an extension of their current press center. Repeat after me: Your blog is not the place for press releases. Blogging is a conversation and it offers a way for your customers to connect with your business on a completely new level. Press releases, on the other hand, are the exact opposite. They’re impersonal, they’re self promotional, and most readers don’t trust them. If you use your blog to republish press releases your customers will have no reason to keep reading and they’ll also likely not trust your content.

How to Avoid: First, don’t ever put out a press release on your blog. You can use your blog to make product or other business announcements, but do so with original writing and in a more casual voice. Second, do use your blog to write about things other than your core business. Share your thoughts on your industry, share insights into the day-to-day work life and processes at your company, and provide tips and tricks you have learned during your time in business.


Mistake #2: Not Blogging Regularly


typing imageThink about the blogs you read on a regular basis — how many of them publish only sporadically? Most successful blogs put out new content at least a couple of times per week and try to stick to a regular schedule. Consistently putting out quality content will keep readers returning and over time it will help you build a community and turn your customers into fans.

How to Avoid: Blogging regularly isn’t easy, so to avoid burning out, brainstorm editorial ideas ahead of time. If you plan to put out new posts every Tuesday and Friday, for example, try not to start writing Tuesday’s post on Tuesday morning. Get other people at your company involved so that one person isn’t shouldering the entire blogging load, and even consider sourcing content from your customers. Remember that anything can provide fodder for a good blog post, so pay attention to the things you read or see on other blogs, newspapers, magazines, or television.


Mistake #3: Not Enabling Conversation


As I already said, blogging is a conversation, and not allowing it to occur on your blog is a mistake. It’s true that blog comments can open you up to criticism, but blogging is an unparalleled opportunity to connect with your customers. You’ll get a lot more out of blogging if you enable — and even encourage — your customers to respond to what you write.

How to Avoid: Obviously the first thing you need to do is enable commenting on your business blog. But beyond that, you need to remember that the conversation is two-way. Get in there and respond to the comments readers leave on your blog and you’ll be more likely to develop a community around your writing that can help turn your customers into fans who will evangelize your products and services and provide you with quality feedback. You should also participate in the conversation on other blogs in your industry by leaving comments on posts elsewhere around the blogosphere. That will help you to establish your “blogging brand” and bring new readers your way.


Mistake #4: Making New Content Hard to Discover


Your blog won’t be very helpful to readers if they aren’t able to easily find new content. You need to make your blog discoverable and you need to make sure that when you add new content, your regular readers will be able to find it.

How to Avoid: There are a few ways to make sure your blog content is more easily discovered.

- Make your blog easy to find by linking to it prominently from your company’s web site and including your blog’s URL in your email signature, on your business cards, and in sales and marketing collateral.

- Use a full RSS feed (because the goal with most business blogs should be to get read, not boost page views) and make it easy for your readers to find and subscribe to.

- Embrace social media technologies like Twitter and Facebook as a way to notify your fans and followers of new blog content, and make it easy for your readers to share content with each other through social media channels and via email.

- Optimize for search engines by putting relevant keywords in post titles and URL slugs and write about the things that your customers are most likely to be searching for — but avoid sounding artificial simply so you can stuff some more keywords into a post.


Mistake #5: Expecting Too Much, Too Soon


goal imageBlogging isn’t a sprint, it’s a marathon. Your blog won’t be an overnight success, and for the first few months it might feel like you’re writing for no one. It can take time to build up your readership and have a regular community of people who participate on your blog. Don’t expect immediate returns from your blog and do expect to put in a lot of hard work.

How to Avoid: Set attainable goals and realize that you’re in it for the long haul. Don’t cancel your blogging efforts after three months — give it at least a year of regularly putting out quality, original content. And make sure that your blog is easy to find, and that your readers are able to easily comment and share posts with others.


More blogging resources from Mashable:


- 6 Tips for Customizing Your Small Business Blog
- 5 Rules for Better Web Writing
- Top 20 Ways to Share a Great Blog Post
- 26 Places to Find Free Multimedia for Your Blog
- HOW TO: Support Social Good on Your Blog

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, Franck-Boston, blackred, marekuliasz

Tags: blog, blogging, business, small business