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A Bloggers Tale, part 2 – foundations and planning

07.20.09 Posted in Blogging, SEO, Social Media by Tim

In part one you learned that I dusted off the counter and made a commitment to blogging again last month. I’ve posted before about what it takes to blog and some critical questions to ask yourself before embarking on the blog path. It’s not to suggest blogging isn’t for everyone but factors such as available time, resources, ideas and dedication have to be considered.

My first step was knowing what topic I could write about daily, an entity that would keep me stimulated and encourage me to network. You also have to ask if you have a level of expertise on a subject matter and the foundation of good original content. If you are tying your blog into your business (which you should) it should be relatively easy to write about your line of work. If you are lucky enough to be doing something you love it’s easier than that, it will be a passion you are happy to share.

foundations 300x225 A Bloggers Tale, part 2 – foundations and planning

Creating a blog that can generate both good traffic and relevant visitors comes down to three things: Planning, planning and planning. You have to formulate a strategy before you start – and we can help with that incidentally.

Let’s say for example your business sells bicycles. Who is your market? What do they probably want to read? What keywords might lead them to your blog? How can you network to initiate interest? How can you tie your blog (and your expertise) into the fact that you sell bicycles?

You then have to ask yourself about your site layout and design. What’s easy to navigate? What categories should you use? How important are images and video? How can you interface the blog with your website? How strong is your branding?

With a strategy decided upon and a design in mind you then have to ask yourself how often will you blog? 3 posts a week with original content is more valuable than seven unoriginal ideas per week. A ‘how-to’ or informational post is more valuable than a simple opinion. An exclusive and interesting post is the most valuable of all.

Next I’ll explain how to start the blog running and gaining traffic once these key planning issues are addressed.

At Green Seed Web Design we are able offer superb web development and coaching – we’ll be happy to help.

Tim at greenseedwebdesign.com


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A bloggers tale

07.16.09 Posted in Blogging, SEO, Social Media by Tim

I’ve become a blogger, it wasn’t overnight and I didn’t think it was in my genes yet it has most definitely happened. I first attempted to blog a few years ago and you may just as well have handed me a french horn and said ‘play me a tune’. I grabbed the concept and thought it’s worth a try. I was able to write, but committing time to it wasn’t easy nor was seeing the value.

Putting together 300-600 cohesive words on a regular basis is obviously as important to blogging as wind is to to a kite. However 2 years ago I had the wind but no string for the kite and it was night time.

I tried, I really did, but back then I felt I was writing to the goldfish we have, opening a word document and typing would have felt as worthwhile. Sure I got the occasional traffic and even now some of those posts are still online getting a few visits here and there. I wasn’t quite sure where I was going and my efforts dried up.

Me in 2007

Four months ago the idea of blogging again raised it’s head as I felt I had a topic to write about that has been a part of my life now for 30 years. I also was now changing career paths and fully understanding the true value of a blog was becoming more apparent every day. Four months ago I made some excuses and put it on the ‘to-do’ pile, a habit I have to break. Spring turned to Summer and the more I learned about blogging the more my idea was making me itch.

Part 2 tomorrow, I’ll explain how a start up blog has gone from zero to 1,000 page views per day in just 24 days. It wasn’t a ponzi scheme – it was subject expertise, networking and creativity. It also helped so much that the blog looks amazing.

For Green Seed Web Design to be able offer superb web development and coaching it was crucial that I had been my own guinea pig. Twitch Twitch, til tomorrow.

Tim at greenseedwebdesign.com


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Bold is Beautiful

07.11.09 Posted in Design by Tim

There’s a growing trend in innovative web design that is as stunning is it is simple. Big and bold homepages that fill your screen, broadcast your message and capture your visitor.

I need to apologize for the lack of posts the last few days, I vowed not to blog if it was above 110f outside, and now I realize I can’t change the weather. It was 113 today and here I am blogging.

giant pandas

Initially I was a bit skeptical about making a web design almost ‘too big’ but the more I see the more I like. Here’s a great example of what I mean of over-sized. However if you marry the right background and images to the big as houses font it can be an effective combination. If you picture the same structure but scale back the grandeur you’re left with just another site.  In the competitive world of web traffic ensuring the visitor who lands on your site makes it beyond the first few moments is critical.

Naturally this option isn’t a solution for all designs. Consider the content of your website, can you convey enough information to captivate the viewer and still make it clear as to the purpose of your site when you may only have room for 10-20 words on the page landing? If so then a big design like this one is not only possible but worth considering.

Think bold, be bold, if you need consultation on a new design just send us a message.

Tim at greenseedwebdesign.com


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Blog Promotion, Try WP Scoop

07.08.09 Posted in Blogging, SEO, Social Media, Wordpress by Tim

You’ve got your blog rolling and finding content flows naturally. Your comments are positive and you are linking out, however the anticipated visitors are still not arriving in droves.

There are of course a mountain of ways to tackle the issue of blog traffic, I’ve found that WPscoop might be on it’s way to rivalling Digg for getting your blog appreciated and ‘out there’. The concept of the site is similar to Digg, the twist being that the site is very much aimed toward bloggers on the WordPress platform.

social media 300x273 Blog Promotion, Try WP Scoop

You can submit your content to WPscoop and exisiting member will be able to vote (scoop) or comment on your articles. When a certain threshold of scoops has been reached your blog entry will be placed on the Upcoming page on WPscoop and gain further exposure.  The diversity of options for someone searching the site is as broad as you might expect with views ranging from 24 hrs / 7 days / 30 days and so on.

With the WP firefox plugin an article can be submitted to scoop with a simple right click. Videos are also able to be submitted.

The membership profiles are also a nice feature allowing you both promote your own blog but in turn reciprocate with 3rd party reviews you have submitted. For blogging to grow takes both commitment and a marketing strategy. Scoop should be a part of your approach.

Tim at greenseedwebdesign.com