Stuff from here and there

Spider

I found a cool spider on my rose bush. @goodwitch knew what it was.

Previously unmentioned by me here at Web Teacher are two posts at BlogHer from the last couple of days. The first was Gmail’s New Priority Inbox. The second was Two Decades of Women, a personal essay that has nothing to do with tech, Internet, web education or teaching.

At eHow, these articles have been getting the traffic:

A blog + a feed + a reader = a more efficient you

Pop quiz time. Do you read several blogs each day? If yes, do you navigate to each one separately? If yes, would you like to save time by subscribing to each one and reading it in a feed reader?

If you are not sure what a feed reader is, this article is for you. I use a feed reader, and I foolishly assumed most blog readers do, too. But recently I read a couple of books. One was Professional Blogging for Dummies. The other was Create Stunning HTML Email That Just Works. Both of these books mentioned statistics about the number of people who use feed readers (or RSS readers, as they are also called). The percentage was very low – 15 or 20%. The number shocked me a bit, because feed readers save a lot of time for people who like to read blogs.

Read the complete post at BlogHer to learn how to use the Google Reader and subscribe to blog feeds.

Is there a gender issue with Facebook Places?

Facebook Places

I’ll do anything for BlogHer. Even try out Facebook Places. I resisted Foursquare and Gowalla and other similar services. But when BlogHer asked me to report on Facebook Places, I couldn’t say no.

First, I’ll explain how to use it. Then I’ll describe how reactions to it have split along gender lines. Finally, I’ll tell you how to deal with privacy settings for this new Facebook service.

Read the full article at BlogHer.

Review: Professional Blogging for Dummies

affiante link to Amazon

A review by Virginia DeBolt of Professional Blogging For Dummies (rating: 5 stars)

Professional Blogging for Dummies is by Susan J. Getgood. It’s from Wiley Publishing (2010).

In all the years that I have been reading and reviewing computer/tech books, I’ve never read one the of the books in Wylie’s For Dummies series. I had the idea that they would be watered down and superficial treatments of the topics. Boy, was I wrong—at least if this book by Susan Getgood is representative of the whole series. This book is a complete guide to becoming a professional, money-making blogger who treats a blog as a business.

The discussion starts with the attitude and mind-set you need if you are serious about being a professional blogger. It tells you how to search out and identify a niche that will fit you. You learn how to do the preliminary planning such as identifying your audience, studying your competitors’ strengths and weaknesses before selecting your niche, and getting involved in your niche before you even begin to blog. If you follow the steps in this section of the book about looking for your niche and planning your blog before you even get it set up, you will be in a really strong position to achieve success. It helps you take a hard-headed look at what you have to offer, what others already offer like it, what you can expect to get out of it, and what you’ll need to put into it.

The necessary steps for setting up a business legally and with the proper legal protections and policies are explained in Chapter 3. This includes help with setting up a policy for endorsements, reviews, and testimonials, and for complying with the FTC disclosure requirement. Chapter 4 takes a look at making money with the blog. Early planning decisions are discussed as well as details about selling ads, finding sponsors, and other money making options. You also learn how to track the money effectively as a business. Chapter 5 goes into depth about selling products or services on a blog. Chapter 6 really digs into making money from advertising. Chapter 7 looks at making money writing for blogs.

There’s a section of the book devoted to building the blog. This includes Chapter 8 about naming the blog, finding a platform and hosting, and registering the domain name. Chapter 9 talks about blog design. Chapter 10 gives you tips on creating the blog’s content. Everything from finding your voice to writing good headlines and using video and images is explained.

Maximizing Your Blog’s Success includes a chapter on getting the word out through email, traditional media, blogrolls, comments, contests, social networks, and search engines. There’s a whole chapter helping with what to do when companies come calling with pitches that may or may not work for your blog. The section on how to work with marketers is very helpful, because bloggers are barraged with marketing PR constantly. Tracking the blog’s success with various measurements and analytics is explained carefully. There’s a chapter with help about keeping the blog fresh and engaged and growing in this section.

The last part of the book is called The Part of Tens. It contains chapters on 10 mistakes to avoid, 10 blogs to learn from, and 10 tips for jump-starting creativity.

Overall, the book is clearly written with excellent examples and advice. It works through the process step-by-step from planning to posting. I think you could follow the guidance in this book to a successful, money-making blog.

The disclaimers: I was asked to review this book by BlogHer, who provided me with a copy of the book. I met Susan Getgood briefly at a BlogHer Conference once and exchanged a few words with her. I even snapped her picture. Many (but not all) of the successful blogs mentioned as examples in the book are members of the BlogHer network. This is not because the book is slanted toward BlogHer or women, but because so many successful bloggers are women who are members of the BlogHer network.

Summary: An excellent resource for starting a profitable blog-based business.

[Cross-posted in a different and expanded form at BlogHer]

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The $100 Question: Why did you start blogging?

$100 Question Promo GraphicYou can win $100 by answering my question at the BlogHer site. To be eligible to win, answer before  Thursday, August 12.

The winner will be picked at random, so leave a comment at BlogHer to get in the running for the money.

The question you have to answer? Just this:

What was the original impulse that drove you to begin blogging? Is that still what’s driving you?

I answered the question myself, if you’re interested. I hope you will go take a chance on winning.

Can Twitter’s new Suggestions for You Feature make you a power Tweeter?

With Discovering Who to Follow, Twitter let the world know that things were changing in Twitterland.

The change is the addition of Suggestions for You to the Twitter Find People menu. The suggestions are personalized and based on the people you follow and the people they follow. Recommendations for you also come from account profiles.

Twitter has had a Browse Interests tab in the Find People options for quite a while. I’ve found some people I wanted to follow that way. But Twitter thinks it has a better way to help me find exactly the right people to follow.

When the news of Suggestions for You first appeared, only about 10% of Twitter users got to try it. Apparently, The Bloggess was one of them. See Oh twitter. I don’t know whether I should feel touched or insulted. Keep in mind that The Bloggess is really good with Photoshop. Just sayin’.

Quite a few of the 90% of Twitter users who didn’t get it right away went on Twitter asking where it was. Others found it a good idea and helped spread the word.

Twitter apes Facebook with Suggestions for You – Sounds like a pretty good idea for those looking for friendship http://bit.ly/daonJk #EFCGMon Aug 02 17:20:02 via HootSuite

Early images of how it would all work appeared at Mashable in Twitter Starts Offering Personalized Suggestions of Users to Follow and TechFemina in Twitter adds the ‘Suggestions For You’ tab.

A few days later, Twitter temporarily suspended the Suggestions for You testing. so that it could be rolled out for all users. A few people encouraged Twitter to keep it gone, gone, gone.

Dear @Twitter I want NO “Suggestions for ME” ! RT @TweetSmarter Twitter Has Disabled TheNew”Suggestions for You”Feature:http://j.mp/d5Yxm1Wed Aug 04 10:45:43 via Seesmic

By now it’s popped into your Twitter account. When I noticed it in mine, I looked to see who was suggested for me. The first four suggestions were an Albuquerque local (my profile says I’m from Albuquerque), a music site (I follow several musicians), and a couple of web development guys (I follow lots of webdev people). On the mark for me, I thought. As I dug deeper into the recommended people, I found a few BlogHers, a few more Albuquerque folks, some more webdev people. Most suggestions were a good match for me.

twitter suggestions

Some were not anyone I’d want to follow. They were suggested because people I follow follow them. If you’re sure you’ll never follow someone, you can use the Hide link, and you’ll never see that name suggested again.

I thought the interface was easy. The account bio is there to help you, a follow button is right there. The only missing piece for me was that you can’t assign someone you decide to follow to one of your existing lists right there on the page.

Based on the suggestions, I decided to follow Nick Finck, Scott Fegette, Tim Berners-Lee and Lisa aka scenariogirl. And I’ll keep looking at the list of suggestions, because I thought they were accurate for my interests. My history with finding people to follow on Twitter has been rather random. This is a way to focus. I wonder how well it would work if I didn’t already follow a few hundred people and have relevant keywords in my bio. I don’t think it would be helpful to someone just starting out on Twitter.

Have you tried it? What did you think? Is it useful or is it another big publicity drum roll over nothing special? Do you agree with the sour grapes tweeter I quoted above or are you a convert? Take the poll!

[polldaddy poll=3595637]

[Cross posted in a somewhat different version at BlogHer.]

Another conversation with Ann Smarty, SEO expert

In the first BlogHer interview with SEO expert Ann Smarty, we talked about how you can improve your search engine rankings and build your traffic as a blogger.

Rhiannon Wilson left a comment on that post, saying,

I think these are great tips for bloggers. But like she said, blogging is more network focused, but as for us eStore Owners, Search Engines are our lifeblood. We get 80% of our traffic directly from search engine searches. I would love to hear her tips for eCommerce websites.

I contacted Ann Smarty about the idea. She said she would be willing to do another interview with me, this time more focused on business. I sent her some of my own questions and a few I got from a quick email exchange with Rhiannon.

Read Ann Smarty’s expert advice on optimizing an eCommerce site for search engines at BlogHer.