Welcome to our website!
We're glad to see you here!

If you're planning to start blogging, then it's the right place for you. Here you'll find all the necessary information on how-to start your own blog, tips and tricks on blogging and many more useful and interesting materials.

Learn how to take your blog from ordinary to extraordinary.

We hope that our articles will be interesting to you and answer on all of your questions. The number of our articles will be increasing constantly, so don't forget to bookmark our site and grab our rss feed.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

How important is SEO for a blog?

I would like to speculate a little about seo blog promotion.
Do it or not? Should I spend money on it? Whether it is necessary to understand and delve into the basics of SEO and try yourself to promote your blog?
Everything, as always, and in fact, depends on the purposes for which you conduct your own blog.
If it is just "a hobby" for the sake of communication, you can not steamed.
Continue to write your posts and have fun! Good luck to you)))
The same thing seems to me, and for the "glamor" of personalities ... just a very well known. I believe that if you are mega cool Steve Jobs and Sergey Brin , the Plain you any page on the World Wide - it will be mega-visited in a few days ... And no matter how optimized
Your posts, which designs and other stuff ... your fans do not care!
But if you are a regular webmaster, who chose a niche for doing my blog, bought a hosting and domain name, set everything as it should, and wrote a few articles, SEO-promotion is a must!
I know some experienced SEO specialist who recently teamed up and opened his own office. So they are still at the stage of creating the site seo-studio-olimp.ru already engaged in its promotion seo-online.
To monetize the site is very important to have high rates of attendance, PR, etc.
All this is achieved much faster with proper seo-promotion. After all, seo - website optimization is to search engines. As you know, it is from them is the most traffic. It was from there comes the lion's share of visitors.
So do not ignore this.
From my own experience: my blog for more than 2 years but I am not engaged in his promotion. Just write a post, some announced in the social sphere, etc.
Hoped that the reference weight will grow naturally. But, in total, it grows veryyyyy slowly. And attendance has increased over the last year not as much as we would like ... (~ 78%) ...
After analyzing their actions and mistakes, I have come to the conclusion that necessarily need to pay attention to seo!!!
Who would not say that there ...
The only question is: to buy a seo professional or very prosharivatsya? ...
I think if you have money - in the battle (it will be enough, and $ 100 per month, you can, of course, more or less - depends on the optimizer)
If, for example, you have got a blog for extra money and do not expect to spend on search engine optimization, it is possible and very little understanding.
I myself act through the second.
In the network a lot of SEO-blogging, seo-communities, seo-forums. By the way, a couple of days ago, my friend, and by the way, the author of seo-blog, hurry up my invite to the biggest and in my opinion the best forum for webmasters. After reviewing this forum only possible to do high-quality seo-promotion and monetization of your blog!
I'm actually very happy that I can communicate in this forum. ))
In general, I continue to promote your blog to gain subscribers, and share their knowledge and experiences on blogging, investing, and manimeykingu on the Internet. And do not lose optimism.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Update Penguin (Penguin) from Google: 5 types of problems that are harmful for websites

If you own a website, then surely you have been surprised to see that the position of your site dramatically decreased immediately after the release of Google Pack, codenamed Penguin? As shown earlier analysis, one of the main factors is the links leading to your website.
The main objective was to freeze the upgrade Penguin Web spam in search results Google. In addition to being a great piece of web spam, and links were with low-quality sites.

Natural links

First of all, Google considers links as "votes". So, in theory, the sites that get the most "votes" should be given the highest rating on Google, as more people find this a valuable resource.
Google analyzes the quantity, quality and relevance of the sites that link to your site. When Google looks at your profile link, it looks at what type of websites link to you how fast you are accumulating these links and anchor text (the combination of words to which you link), used referring website. When the algorithm of Google determines such things as a huge number of new options or as a disparity in the anchor text, he thinks of the sanctions.
How Google and many SEO-experts for many years taught us, you can get more options by creating a unique, authentic content, to which other people naturally want to refer.

Unnatural links

Sites that fall under the "punishment" after upgrading Penguin unites them is the lack of natural links. 5 major problems that are present in all sites in this category:
  1. Paid up links with anchor text exactly match the key : the wish to promote your site on a particular key, there is only one way to move - buying links on other websites using the key exact match. Google determines that it is paid up links created just for the fraud-rated PR, rather than to provide valuable information to visitors.
  2. Spam in the comments : The following two problems for sites that are trying to accumulate unnatural links on specific keywords crafty ways, are the captions in the comments, which contain the text of an exact match key, as well as in people who used the logins with the exact key.
  3. Guest posts on questionable websites: guest posts, and although the permissible manner of use are the links to the site, updating Penguin subjected to punishment, even those sites that are referred to other sites with low quality content, which are more focused on the use of anchor text, rather than the provision of important information.
  4. Catalogues Articles : lean content, containing links to the key as an exact match is another common factor.
  5. Links to unsafe websites : if you have any incoming links from sites that were identified as malicious, sites with endless pop-up ads or sending out spam? This is another factor that led to the loss of the websites rankings in Google, so that links to and from spammers or "bad neighbors" are also dangerous.
Overall, the Penguin does not update brings changes that Google could be regarded as inappropriate. Google has implemented this algorithm just to catch hackers attempting tricky ways to get into the search results. If any (or all) items fit your case, you probably applied your efforts to obtain the rating is no longer enough.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

How I Started Making $3,000 a Month Blogging About Travel

It has been about one full year since I started blogging about travel, and I have started to generate $3,000 or more a month via my travel blogs.


My very first post was published on May, 4th, 2010, and it was nothing but grammar mistakes and partaking in an activity that I really don’t enjoy: writing. I’m telling you this because even though I am a horrible writer, English os not my first language, and I need other people to proofread my work, I’m proof that you really don’t have to be the best at something in order to do make money via your blog. I have started to make at least $3,000 a month via my main travel blog, wanderingtrader.com.


Initially, I started my blog to capture traffic for a day trading business that I was running. I wanted to get more people interested in day trading and, well, get more sales. What it turned into was my own personal travel blog about my passion for travel, and tips about day trading and travel. My whole blogging strategy is based on exposure; you might have read my post about focusing on quantity of traffic instead of quality when you first start out.


There are a million posts on ProBlogger about making money blogging online and frankly almost everyone online makes money the same way. It seems there aren’t very many new ways that bloggers can make money from blogs. Darren wrote a great post on how bloggers make money from blogs if you are interested in learning your different options.


Instead of talking about ways to make money blogging I’m going to share how I managed to start making $3,000 a month via my travel blog in less than a year. I consider it ten months, really, since I took two months off when I got extremely frustrated by a small change in my blog design that crippled the traffic to my main blog. The list below is what I started focusing on, in order of importance.


There are some instances where you find advertisers, but for the most part advertisers find you.


Once you have the right criteria you are eligible for a range of money making options with your blog. The most important thing is getting your name out there. You want to try to focus on guest posts, SEO, and getting on every single blog list that’s related to your niche. The more people who see your blog, the more likely it’ll be that advertisers will find you as well. Below are some examples of the travel-related lists that my blogs are listed on on.


By working on exposure, authority will come naturally. You want to be careful how quickly you build your authority online, because you can’t become an expert in your niche if you only launched your website yesterday.


Creating solid authority for yourself, and advertisers will know that you have a website that is both legitimate and powerful in the niche you’re covering. If you achieve enough exposure, and have good authority, then you may be considered for things like a press trip. That’s a bonus that might be restricted to the travel niche, but you get the idea.


How we measure authority is something of a debatable issue, since most of the lists on the web have some kind of limitation. Either way, when I have asked people specifically about this they have repeatedly given me the same information:


As I explained earlier, there was a time when I got extremely frustrated and just gave up. A redesign to my blog caused me to take a giant hit from Google, and I was extremely annoyed. I just gave up!


If I didn’t take that two- or three-month break, I might have been on my way to making double what I make now. The tactics I’ve outlined so far helped me in the very first month that I started to make money with the blog. I’ve now nearly doubled my income using the strategies I’ll share below.


When you get started blogging, you have to understand that you are the new kid on the block. There are people I know personally who have been blogging for five to ten years, and I call these people the Rat Pack. They’re the cool kids on the block that you want to get to know and work with.


How did you feel when you met that new kid in your class back in school? The way for them to succeed was to avoid being pushy or asking for too much. They had to be part of the community.


I made the new-kid mistake of approaching people the wrong way, and asking for things I shouldn’t have. Luckily I had a few bloggers point me in the right direction, and that allowed me to get to where I am today. Be engaging, but not demanding. Be interested, but not needy. It’s all about being part of the community and not trying to force your way into the cool kids’ group.


By interacting with the Rat Pack, you’ll open yourself to an extensive group of people who already know how things work and can share best practices. Since these people already have exposure, that may allow you to take a shortcut when you are ready to start making money with your blog. By talking to other bloggers in the field, I went from zero advertisers to having a list of over 60. Use the tools above for exposure and authority to find the Rat Pack in your niche.


I’m busy, the guy at Mcdonald’s is busy, your kids are busy. I get it, you’re busy. When I first started blogging I was running a day trading business, traveling around the world, day trading, and running my blog. How did I handle all of this? I hired help. I found what now is a team of employees overseas that I pay to do a lot of the admin and back-office work for me.


The old adage is really true: it takes money to make money. While you may not have hundreds or thousands of dollars to invest in getting someone to help you, you may be able to afford, say, $100 a month. Understand that your time is money. By outsourcing mundane tasks—even if it’s just a few hours’ work a week—you will free up your time to do more important things, like creating quality content and thinking of better ways to make money with your blog.


The one goal I had for my blog was to break even. Any business or blog that you create should at least break even. You’re not going to be doing something for very long if you keep losing money. I pay a team of two people a total of $510 a month for roughly 45-50 hours a week of work. Just imagine the things I can accomplish during that timeframe!


After you have successfully started making money with one site, you can continue on to other ventures to increase your income and your online empire.


Think about expanding to other niches online. My main niche is travel which is absolutely massive. I now am branching out to my other passion, which is day trading. I have started an Online Day Trading Academy to help others, and now I can blog about day trading and travel across two sites, which will significantly increase my exposure online.


What about you? Are you making money from your blog yet? Which of these strategies do you use?

Monday, October 3, 2011

What Aspiring Actors Can Teach You About Blogging

If you were an aspiring actor, and you spotted a famous movie star on the street, would you run up to them and ask them for help? You might, but I’m willing to bet that 99 times out of 100, you would get nowhere. In fact, those odds are probably very generous.


I am willing to bet that those odds would improve if you were to approach them, briefly introduce yourself, compliment them on their work, and ask if it would be okay to write to their agent with a few questions that they might consider answering if they get time.


When you’re dealing with people above your station, the hard sell is almost always a failure. If you were to deal with your fellow bloggers in the spirit of the more polite and unobtrusive aspiring actor, you would establish some highly valuable relationships.


As Darren explained, it’s wise to embrace the competition. It doesn’t matter what niche you are in—there are almost always going to be more authoritative blogs already in existence. And that is a good thing, for two key reasons:

It demonstrates that there is a market for your niche.It provides you with an opportunity tap into an established audience.

Who wouldn’t want to take advantage of a resource of already warm, highly targeted leads?


So how can you tap into the audiences of your contemporaries? Not in the way that many people try to, that’s for sure. Do not emulate the method of the rude and desperate aspiring actor. There is few things more irritating to a blogger than being contacted by another who simply asks for a link to, or mention of, their site.


Assuming that you are the proverbial minnow, you only need to concern yourself with one thing when reaching out to your peers—providing value. Whilst simply asking for help may occasionally reap short term rewards, it is far more valuable to establish long term relationships based upon giving.


The desire to reciprocate is human instinct. For the most part, if you offer value to your peers, they will eventually be inclined to return the favor.


So what should you do? Here are a few things you can do to get started:

Drop them a line and compliment their work.Share their posts.Add useful and insightful comments to their posts.Link to posts of theirs that you find valuable.Review their products.

Please don’t let your imagination be stifled by my suggestions—more inventive ways of reaching out to your peers can offer higher rewards! For instance, you might choose to post a video on your blog entitled “Five Reasons You Should Be Following (insert name here)”. That might grab their attention!


Always make sure that your complimentary nature does not turn into overt fawning, and don’t go out of your way to tell the person in question that you are doing all of these lovely things—it will look disingenuous.


The key is to do all of the above (and more) with absolutely no expectation of a reward. I would like to think that I have already established some really positive relationships with bloggers in a short period of time, and for the most part, my generosity has not been reciprocated. How does this make me feel? I’m totally okay with it. Reciprocity is not an obligation, and what you consider due reward for your generosity may not be realistic.


When I get in touch with a fellow blogger, it is not in the vain hope that I can get something out of it. It is because I think they offer quality content, and I want to get to know them better. If something comes out of a burgeoning relationship that positively affects my blog, that is a wonderful bonus.


Once you have started befriending bloggers, you’ll have to play it by ear. Your new friendships will probably bring about unexpected benefits without you having to do anything. But if you think that there is some way in which your friend can help you, and it is not asking too much, then once you are on good terms, you may consider asking for a favor.


If you do decide to, then make sure that you are not asking too much. Put yourself in the shoes of your compatriot—would what you are asking for make them uncomfortable? Always err on the side of conservatism if you feel compelled to ask for something. I personally am far more inclined to never suggest anything that does not offer some kind of benefit in return. Simply saying “can you please link to my site?” is not something I would recommend, because if you already have a great rapport with someone, they would have done so already if they wanted to.


You probably know of many bloggers in your niche. You have probably contacted some of them before. You may not have gone about it in what I consider the right way.


Now is the time to make amends. Start engaging with people—start helping them. You are entering into a long term process, but one which is bound to offer fantastic rewards, given enough time and the right attitude.

7 Powerful Reasons Why Companies Will Pay for You to Blog

Influential bloggers are being paid top dollar to write sponsored posts (thousands of dollars per post is not unheard of). They’re gifted with luxury items, cars and overseas trips, and invited to events previously exclusive to A-List celebrities and long-established journalists.


Bloggers worldwide are proving to be fierce competition for mainstream media, as companies decide how to get the best return on investment for their marketing buck.


If you have the following seven things, then your blog and social media networks will be highly valuable digital assets, sought after by major companies.


Even if you don’t quite have the same reach and clout as some of these bloggers, you can still apply these principles to negotiate your own deals with smaller businesses in your niche.


ProBlogger Training Day event speakers Craig Makepeace and Caz Makepeace are travel bloggers who landed a corporate sponsorship deal with a major airline, to cover a high profile international sporting event. At the end of this post, we’ll see these seven points in action, as we take a look at their success in attracting sponsorship from a major brand.


The people in a profitable niche for major companies tend to be decision makers, consumers or influencers in the buying process, for either highly priced items (like cars, technology, travel or finance), or highly consumed items (like food, health products, household goods).


How do you know if your niche is profitable? Just take a look around in mainstream media. If companies are already paying big bucks to advertise to your audience on TV, radio, magazines and newspapers, then you’re in a profitable niche.


If you’ve created a group of people who gather on your blog and social media networks, then what you’ve created has the potential to be extremely financially valuable.


Companies always want to know where their target market is hanging out and get in front of them. Trouble is, as outsiders, whose primary motivation is to sell, they’re not exactly welcomed.


That’s why they’re willing to pay to get access to your tightly formed online community, which has its very own culture, rules and etiquette. Your intimate knowledge of how your community thinks and behaves has a valuable price tag on it.


Being in a commercially attractive niche and having impressive reach in numbers (in terms of blog traffic, subscribers and social media followers) makes your community really valuable. A big corporate client will be after the exposure you can give them.


What kind of numbers are valuable? That all depends.


Essentially, it comes down to the demand to reach your niche, how targeted your audience is and what other advertising avenues are available to the company to reach that specific audience.


The more profitable the niche, and the harder those communities are to access, the more money a company will be willing to pay you to get in front of them.


This is what makes a blogger much more appealing to companies for advertising potential than say, television, print media, billboards and flyers.


Bloggers engage with their audience, who eagerly share their thoughts and feelings. In addition, they actively give bloggers permission to communicate with them, by following or subscribing.


Engaged communities also show clear signs of activity, through comments, posts and tweets. This is valuable in the eyes of a potential marketer, because an active community gives the company a way to evaluate and measure a campaign’s success.


An indicator of a successful marketing campaign is one where the target market responds to it, hopefully positively (although a highly engaged negative response can also be seen as successful, depending on the company’s objectives).


A blogger with a highly engaged and active community is more likely to have influence, which is what’s really going to make a company take notice.


A company will pay for your ability to help get the word out, your referral or your endorsement.


If you can do all three, to an audience who will listen to you and believe you, then you are in a very strong negotiating position to command a price.


A bigger company with a large marketing budget is most likely interested in building brand awareness, exposure and chipping away at a longer-term objective to improve market perception.


The good news for a blogger is that they’re unlikely to expect a huge spike in sales from working on a one-off campaign with you. This eases the pressure off you, relieving expectation that you’ll influence your readers to rush out and buy the product.


Having said that, if you do have the clout to change attitudes, beliefs and market perception about a particular product or service—or you can get people to buy in noticeable numbers—then that will clearly make you extremely valuable in the corporate marketplace.


If you have all of the above advantages, then what a company wants is to align with your brand. You’re obviously credible and your brand says something that they want to be perceived as being.


They want your audience to think they’re worthy of attention, too.


Is your going rate less than the cost of advertising with traditional media power houses, or a celebrity endorsement? Most bloggers are. You’re instantly more appealing, price-wise—especially if you’re willing to accept non-cash payments which the company can offer you at low cost to them.


More importantly, if a major company is willing to do business with you, then they see you as a profitable return on investment.


To demonstrate these seven points, let’s take a look at a blog that’s had success in attracting big-brand sponsorship.


After blogging for a little over a year, Craig Makepeace and Caz Makepeace secured a sponsorship deal with Australia’s leading international and domestic airline, Qantas, to travel around New Zealand and cover the Rugby World Cup.

If you would like to hear more about the specific steps they took to secure this sponsorship, you can listen to my exclusive interview with Caz on my blog, Mother’s Love Letters.


Blog: y Travel Blog
Niche and Community: Travelers, world-wide.
Sub-niches: Independent world travel, working holidays, family travel.
Reach: 

50,000+ visitors a month70,000+ Page Views per month3,000+ Facebook fans5,000+ Twitter followers1,200+ subscribers

Level of engagement: Average 15-20 comments per blog post. Daily social media interaction. Reply to almost every blog comment. 12,000+ Tweets to date. Facebook fan page is the most interactive and engaged in this niche.
Influence: Klout Score: 70


Brand:   Fun-loving, friendly travellers who are about making your life a story to tell. They believe life is all about the memories, so they make sure they live their life in a way that creates many memories through travel. Their goal is to help people get inspired, get informed and get going.


The deal: All expenses paid 12 day tour of New Zealand, doing activities and attending Rugby World Cup matches. Qantas will also be promoting the bloggers. In return, all Craig and Caz have to do, is have fun, blog, Facebook, and Tweet!


What impressed Qantas most: The bloggers’ level of engagement with their active community.


A key secret to their success: Guest posting. This was key to growing traffic.


Their top tips: Be clear about your brand and make it authentic. Network and build relationships in order to build your community. Social media is crucial, but look at offline networking opportunities, too. Value yourself. Consider how short-term income opportunities for advertising and sponsored posts that compromise content quality may affect your blog perception and brand in the long term. Learn how to write a sponsorship proposal. Don’t be limited by the fact that you’re a new blogger. Every big blogger starts off by being a new blogger.


Is corporate sponsorship for bloggers something that’s common in your niche? Are you looking at aligning yourself with a company, as a monetization strategy?

Run an Awesome Blog Contest in 5 Steps

Running a contest on your blog can be a great way to generate new readership, reactivate stagnant subscribers, and increase the engagement of your readers.


Competitions can be a lot of hard work for little or no results, unless you run them to a plan and have a clear objective in mind.


Here are five tips for running an awesome blog contest campaign.


As bloggers we love readers, we love engagement, we love community—a contest can help you achieve any or all of these things. When planning your contest, set a goal as to what you need to achieve.


Do you want more:

email SubscribersRSS readerssocial media fanssales of your productcomments and engagement?

Set your goals as numbers—if you wish to increase your email subscribers, how many do you want?


The true measure of a successful competition is in its metrics, and without a clear, numerical goal in place, you won’t know if your hard work is paying off.


If youire hoping to attract new readership to your blog, you want your contest to be seen by as many people as possible. You can do this using a few strategies:


Increasing your contest’s visibility is the key to success, and the easiest medium to send your contest viral is social media.


A third-party app helps you to encourage your fans to share their entries on social media. You can either use a blog plugin to run your contest, or use a Facebook based application such as Binkd or Wildfire App. (Full disclosure here, Binkd is my product!)


Leveraging someone else’s list is a powerful way to attract a fresh audience. Team up with a non-competing colleague in your niche and share the rewards of your contest. In exchange for the cross promotion, you could allow them to market to the list generated by the contest.


Getting a high-profile sponsor of your contest to assist in the promotion or in the donation of a prize is another way to help market your contest. It also adds credibility to your contest by transferring trust.


If you’re using a competition app, there are several types of contests available:


A skills contest requires your entrants to perform a task to be elligible to answer. Short story contests, answer a question contests, and write a jingle skills contests are popular. Entrants can then either be drawn randomly, or encouraged to share their entries to get their friends to vote. Skills contests are similar to sweepstakes, but the entrants can influence their success or failure in the competition.


You can select to have the entrant with the most votes win, or have each vote count for an entry, and drawn similar to a sweepstakes contest.


A visual form of skills contest, here, your entrants upload a photo, and then appeal to their contacts to vote for the photo. This is a really good way to visually promote your brand. Getting a photo of your fans using your product, or performing a stunt related to your brand spreads the word about you far and wide!


A challenge contest can send your entrants on a virtual scavenger hunt around your site and social media pages, searching for answers to your questions. This type of contest is powerful for creating engaged and interactive entrants.


Your entrants submit their entry, and the winner(s) are randomly drawn. Sweepstakes are a game of chance, not skill.


Increase the stickiness of your contest by increasing the engagement of your entrants.


Statistically, contests with multiple entry steps deliver more engaged and sticky entrants. A challenge contest gives your entrants the opportunity to explore your site, and interact with various articles on your blog.


Make the contest goals achievable for your entrants to complete. For example, if you’re running an article contest to generate some awesome new articles, don’t set word counts or criteria too high or tight.


Don’t make your challenge contest questions too difficult to answer, or be too cryptic in your clues.


You can effectively run a contest just on your blog, or by a forum and email management system, but it’s a lot of hard work and can be an administrative nightmare!


There are several applications on the market that automate running a contest and allow you to keep the list of entrants to market to during and after the contest.


Some of the most popular are:

Binkd a contest platform that offers a WordPress plugin and Facebook Sweepstakes and Challenge contestsWildfire App, for Facebook Sweepstakes, Photo Contests, and Vote to WinBulbstorm, for Facebook Sweepstakes, Photo Contests, and Vote to Win.

Running a contest can really help you build up your readership and drive quality, qualified fans to your email subscriber list and social media platforms. You can simplify the job by using a third-party application to handle the grunt work of administering the contest.


Have you used a contest to promote your blog and engage readers? Share your experiences and tips in the comments.

3 Ways to Reduce Bounce Rates and Increase Conversions

One of the many tough obstacles that newer bloggers have to deal with is the fact that many of their visitors, which they work very hard to get, will often “bounce” away from their pages—they’ll immediately leave the blog after landing on the homepage.


This “bounce rate” can have a drastic effect on your blog’s success at any stage, but especially in the beginning. It’s very important to be able to keep the interest of your earliest visitors in order to build the loyal following that’s the essential foundation of any great blog.

So, what can you do to keep people around your blog long enough to explore its great content?


As a blogger, you’re probably very familiar with (and even have) a navigation bar on your blog, and you likely recognize its importance in helping readers get to your content.


However, many people do not take full advantage of this above-the-fold navigation bar, which inevitably draws a lot of clicks. After all, your nav bar really stands out on your site, and people are very familiar with how these menus work.


You can get more out of your navigation bar by having it link to pages that are much more than just a sequential list of posts in separate categories (as most bloggers do). I’d like to show you how by teaching you about a tactic that I call “super pages” that will direct readers to your best content.


Instead of just listing those categories up on your navigation bar, you can create separate blog pages that accomplish many useful goals, including pages that turn into SEO powerhouses and are incredibly shareable (linkbait), pages that convert new visitors, and pages that help you establish trust with people coming across your blog for the first time.


First things first, one super page to include in your navigation bar would be a Start Here page, where you can include a lot of elements that could be beneficial for first-time readers, and boost your subscriber count.


This page will reduce your bounce rate, guaranteed, as readers who may otherwise have been confused and left your site now have somewhere to begin. In fact, on many of my blogs, it is the most clicked link on my navigation bar.


Secondly, the Start Here page gives visitors a chance to see what your site is really about. You can also make this a little About Me page, putting a trustworthy face on a formerly anonymous website, and letting visitors know that your blog is run by a real person looking to offer great content.


Third, if the above two things weren’t enough: you can use this opportunity (after a descriptive About Me section and great Getting Started guide on your page) to offer visitors a way to get email updates, and if they like what they’ve seen thus far, they will opt in.


So not only will you be reducing bounce rates, you’ll be gaining more subscribers who might otherwise have slipped away after visiting your Getting Started page.


The other way to use super pages effectively is illustrated by Copyblogger. You’ll notice the navigation on that site includes topics that the site posts about, such as landing pages, email marketing, and keyword research. However, these links on the nav bar do not take you to a categorical list of posts.


Rather, they take you to a super page that presents a long description of the topic, including useful insight into getting started in that category, with plenty of links to the best posts on Copyblogger on that specific topic.


So, for instance, on the Email Marketing page on Copyblogger, an intro on the topic and its effectiveness is given, followed by links to great Copyblogger content, followed by a link to the Copyblogger newsletter specifically on email marketing (which people are obviously interested in). This is followed at last by an opt-in form that states that Copyblogger is a great place to learn about email marketing.


Anyone clicking to this page will be interested in email marketing, so now they have a list of links to great posts that is easily shareable (you’ll find that super pages are some of the most shareable pages on your site), a way to opt in to get updates, and a great descriptor of the topic at hand.


Much better than just a list of archived blog posts, wouldn’t you say?


One strategy that is implemented on almost all successful WordPress blogs is the giving away of freebies. These are almost always digital products, so that it doesn’t cost the blogger anything to give these products away.


This strategy works so well because people are much more likely to follow your blog if they see free and valuable content coming their way: they won’t want to miss out on anything in the future.


One of the best ways to do this is to create an autoresponder to send out a freebie if people sign up for your blog’s updates. I’ve found an extremely useful tool on MailChimp for doing this, which is described in detail on MailChimp’s blog.


If that sounds a bit too complicated, don’t worry! Freebies by themselves work as great promoters for people to follow you, so even by sharing a few freebies you are bound to gain more subscribers.


However, there is a way to greatly leverage your freebies: make people share your website in order to get them!


You may have heard of the service PayWithATweet, but there is a much better option that I’d like to show you called CloudFlood. What this service allows you to do is share anything you’d like to give away for free, but your viewers have to send out a tweet (that you generate) in order to gain access to it.


So if I’m sharing a new pack of icons for web design, and I want to give it away for free, I can set up my CloudFlood button and whenever someone wants to access the free download, all they have to do is send out the automatic tweet that I made, and they get instant access.


I could make the tweet link back to my username on Twitter, and have it say something like “Free icon pack for web designers up for grabs, download it now! bit.ly/SomeLinkHere.”


So, I get to give away free content that is useful to people, and they share my website to their Twitter followers … sounds like a win-win!


If there is one thing you should take away from any place giving blog advice, it’s this: your blog is nothing without loyal subscribers or followers.


Thus, it is very important to convert people from the get-go, and making it easy to follow your blog is something that is of utmost importance.


Creattica has some great, free pre-made PSD buttons that are easily edited (you don’t need to be a designer, it’s very simple) so you can add whatever text you want. You can also get some great buttons at Graphic River, such as these.


The link above takes you to an example button that you can edit if you have the PSD files (which are included on the Creattica buttons as well as on Graphic River). So you could easily edit the text to say something like “Follow Me For Updates” or “Get Updates From My Blog” or whatever you think will encourage your subscribers to click on the button.


Eye-catching buttons that stand out and complement your blog are guaranteed to make those who come across your content more likely to subscribe. Copywriters and bloggers alike know that big, beautiful buttons are just calling to be clicked. Are there any on your page?


As you can see there are a lot of things that you can do (for free!) to reduce your blog’s bounce rate, and in the end, grow your blog’s subscribers.


Even if you only drop your bounce rate by a few percentage points, think about how many visitors that will mean in the long run, over your blog’s life.


Capturing a visitor when they land is the starting point for any visitor to become a new subscriber to your blog. You need to do all you can to make sure things start off on the right foot.


How do you plan on dropping your blog’s bounce rate?

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More