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November 2007

Gifts for Bloggers: Gossip Bubbles!

Today's Guest Blogger is Anne, gentle host of Ample Sanity, one of the tastiest, crunchiest, resource-full weblogs on the Net. You can learn more about Anne at the end of this post.

The holiday season is fast approaching and plans need to be made. Between hoping Grandpa doesn't do the pull-my-finger routine when the boss comes for Christmas dinner and wondering if you can get the giant inflatable snowglobe repaired Aunt Pernitha drove her caddy over last year, gift lists will need to be prepared.

Fortunately, Sweet Tooth has already solved one of your gift-giving dilemmas in a rather cool way. Inspired by world of blogs, the Gossip Bubble necklace makes an ideal gift for any blogger or gossip gal.

Gossipbubblesilver     Gossipbubblegold

These snazzy necklaces are available in either sterling silver or 18k gold vermeil and come on a 1.5mm ball chain with lobster clasp. Really, too adorable. Why not buy one for yourself as well, and we shall know each other by our wearable comment icons.

Now if only Sweet Tooth could figure a way to jazz up fruitcakes.

(Originally seen at Notcot)

Anne: Purveyor of Imagination. Curator of Curiosities. Addicted to outstanding sites.

  • Baby-boomer, humorist, (ex)actress
  • Current Industry: Non-Prophet
  • Ethnicity: Chiricahua Apache
  • Socially: Irresponsible
  • Cancer: In Remission
  • Blog+Portal=Blortal

A Cornucopia of Icons

Today's Guest Blogger is Anne, gentle host of Ample Sanity, one of the tastiest, crunchiest, resource-full weblogs on the Net. You can learn more about Anne at the end of this post.

Dr. Who icons

Web icons are a wonderful way to add visual impact and personality to a blog. Here's a nice list of free web icons to spice up your design.

Remember, a link back to these generous folks is a nice way to say "thank you", even if it's not required. And have a spectacular day!

Anne: Purveyor of Imagination. Curator of Curiosities. Addicted to outstanding sites.

  • Baby-boomer, humorist, (ex)actress
  • Current Industry: Non-Prophet
  • Ethnicity: Chiricahua Apache
  • Socially: Irresponsible
  • Cancer: In Remission
  • Blog+Portal=Blortal

Top 5 Traffic Building Tips for Personal Bloggers

This is a guest-post by Skellie. She shares more practical blogging tips at Skelliewag.org. You will find more about Skellie at the end of this post.

Personal bloggers often face a tall hurdle when looking for advice about building a better blog. Many of the tips and tricks advocated by those who blog about blogging simply don't apply to the kind of content so-called 'cat bloggers' create.

In this post, I want to change this trend by offering my top 5 traffic building strategies personal bloggers can and should use.

1. Rethink the way you approach guest-posts. I know a lot of personal bloggers think guest posts aren't relevant to them. After all, you're supposed to target sites in your 'niche', but how does that work if you're the only person in your niche?

Guest posts can still be very useful for personal bloggers. There are probably no other blogs about you out there, but there are likely to be many based around your interests, hobbies and skills.

If you find yourself writing regularly on a topic then consider guest-posting in that niche. It can be a great way to raise your profile as a blogger and drive some traffic back to your blog.

2. Focus on forums. Forums are all about the cult of personality -- for that reason, they're the perfect place to develop relationships with potential readers. Pick a big, thriving forum on a topic you're passionate about and get involved. Post regularly, be insightful and be an upstanding forum citizen. Make sure to link back to your blog in your forum signature.

I've seen many thriving personal blogs built on the back of an equally thriving forum profile.

3. Comments are key. With other types of blogging the person behind the blog doesn't always matter, as long as the information there is useful. Personal blogs, on the other hand, bring you to the fore.

Readers will read or leave your blog depending on how they feel about you. Leave a positive impression on other bloggers and their readers by leaving thoughtful comments on their posts.

The key to growing as a personal blogger is to build a grassroots network of fans. Commenting on other blogs regularly is an essential part of this process.

4. Get into your local blogging scene. More so than other niches personal blogging tends to be locally focused. You'll find that certain groups emerge within the personal blogging scene, generally clustered around a specific area (usually a country or city). Attending (or organizing) meet-ups for bloggers in your area can be an effective way to join your local network.

5. Don't ignore social media. Personal bloggers can write posts with mass appeal. Never think that because you're a personal blogger you can't aim for social media success. This simply isn't the case. Just because your writing is focused on you doesn't mean you can't create content that will benefit others -- regardless of whether they're familiar with you or not.

Some suggestions for social media targeted articles:

  • A list of your favorite things (movies, software, photos, whatever).
  • A post passionately arguing a point of view.
  • Lessons you've learned that will be useful to others.
  • Your favorite links on a topic.

While these should help you get started, there are plenty more on this list of 37 viral post ideas.

I hope these five strategies help you kick-start the growth of your blog.

Moomin Who is Skellie?

Besides working on Skelliewag.org I'm studying Political Science and Communications in Melbourne, Australia. I'€™ve been creating web content on a wide variety of topics for more than seven years.

I write on this topic because it's a passion of mine. I'm also interested in web design, music, politics, gaming, creative writing, journalism and a little too crazy about football (of the soccer variety). In future I'm hoping to work in international politics with a focus on women's issues. Being a woman myself, I know a bit about that stuff ;).

Blogging Punch! Blogging Pizazz!

Today's Guest Blogger is Anne, gentle host of Ample Sanity, one of the tastiest, crunchiest, resource-full weblogs on the Net. You can learn more about Anne at the end of this post.

You're such a style puppy, sitting there in your reactee, sporting a tribal tattoo or tramp stamp. But did you know stylin' tats work on blogs as well?

Tasty Tattoo is a free set of PNG files or Photoshop brushes for your blog/design projects. This trendy set has been expertly handcrafted by Jason Gaylor, the creative fellow behind Designfruit, and they're a snap to resize or colorize without loss of quality.

If tattoos aren't your thing, you'll find other equally tasty sets as well. Japanese Foliage is a beautiful set inspired by Japanese-styled prints, and Valentastic Valentine has romantic flourishes.

As always, please read Designfruit's terms of use page. All of these elements are a great way to easily add a bit of punch and pizazz to your design. Blogging is such a lovely comfort of strangers -- how wonderful to find caring, sharing folks who inspire us every day.

Japanese foliage

Anne: Purveyor of Imagination. Curator of Curiosities. Addicted to outstanding sites.

  • Baby-boomer, humorist, (ex)actress
  • Current Industry: Non-Prophet
  • Ethnicity: Chiricahua Apache
  • Socially: Irresponsible
  • Cancer: In Remission
  • Blog+Portal=Blortal

Have Blogs Lost Their Humanity? & Links

teddy bears

Today you get more than links, because I need to write about something that has been annoying me. It might annoy you, too. The fact that I'm writing about this two weeks after the fact just reinforces why I am not an A-list blogger.

ATTN: Tech Bloggers! You are not all there is. Yours are not the only blogs; you are not the only bloggers.

Last month, Robert Scoble (whom I read, ironically, due to a Montana -- that is, a human -- connection) wrote:

. . . there’s something deeper going on on on blogs.

1. Blogs have lost their humanity. Their weirdness. Instead we’ve become vehicles to announce new products and initiatives  . . .
2. We’ve gotten too caught up in the TechMeme games.
3. We’re bored. The interesting stuff is happening off blogs . . .
4. Creative stuff and ideas and questions are getting spread out all over the place.

I tried to challenge him on this in comments, but gave up when he responded, after several exchanges (in one of which he told me I have no clue):

Continue reading "Have Blogs Lost Their Humanity? & Links" »

Blogs as a medium for online literary magazines: lessons from qarrtsiluni

Today's Guest Poster is Dave Bonta. You can learn more about Dave at the end of this post.

qarrtsiluni screenshot

Two years ago, when some friends and I started a new blog called qarrtsiluni, we weren't really thinking of publishing an online literary magazine. The idea was simply to create a place to share our best work, more selective than a typical group blog or an aggregator for a blog network -- two other ideas on the table at the time.

As valuable as the discipline of blogging can be, the never-revise, never-look-back mentality sometimes prevents us from writing as well as we should. We thought it would be fun if we invited a bunch of writers and artists to contribute work on a single topic or in a single style for a couple months at a time, and found volunteers to act as temporary editors, make all the hard decisions, and help with revisions if necessary.

It turned out, of course, that some of the conventions of literary magazine publishing were worth adopting. After some ten months of confusion occasionally bordering on chaos, two of us stepped forward to act as managing editors and began to formulate a more coherent vision and set of procedures. (You can read the results on our About and How to Contribute pages.)

We began to talk about "issues" rather than "theme-periods." We built an email notification list, began to solicit submissions from writers we knew, and got qarrtsiluni listed on Duotrope's Digest. And at some point during a site re-design in spring 2006, my co-editor Beth Adams slipped in a new tagline: online literary magazine.

Continue reading "Blogs as a medium for online literary magazines: lessons from qarrtsiluni" »

5 Simple Tactics for Blogging Success

Today's guest poster is Damien Riley, host of the Online Diarists Forum. You will find more about Damien at the end of this post.

faces|vase gestalt 

Blogging is like a Gestalt image: One person sees the vase while another sees the two faces. The trick is knowing what to look for and how to make it look that way!

In this post, I name 5 blogging challenges for any blogger and simple tactics to be successful.  At the end I share what I measure success by:

1. Ideas: I keep a small pad in my pocket. When I get ideas for blog entries, I jot them down. Sometimes I'll be on my way to work or even relaxing on a lunch break when inspiration strikes.

I have learned that a one word entry in my book is quite sufficient to recall good ideas later. I get many of these one word entries in a given day.

When I actually sit down to blog however, only one, or even none, gets through. In the long-term picture, even if only a small number of these "from the field" ideas get blogged, then you know you aren't missing the best.

2. Photos: Every photo you take off your camera or save from the web, put in a dedicated folder. This makes it easy to retrieve them. Don't just scatter them on your desktop.

When you get a lot of photos in there, archive that set into an "archive" with the date as the title. This way you always have a small number of photos to work with when you open the folder.

Be saving photos all the time. You'd be amazed how even boring pictures can be used as illustrations when they might apply to a future post. (For the advanced: Get a copy of ADOBE Photoshop and learn how to make drop shadow and frame effects.)

Continue reading "5 Simple Tactics for Blogging Success" »

Fun & Useful Links for Bloggers

teddy bears Guest posters will be coming on board this week, to get me past the NaNoWriMo and NaBloPoMo challenges -- stay tuned for some good stuff!

My contribution this month will be a weekly post of fun and useful links I've come across for bloggers. If you like this feature, I'll continue the practice after the month is past.

This first post includes some links I found earlier:

Stumbled: 

Bookmarked:

Click through, learn and enjoy!

tiny teddy bear graphic
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