Monday, October 15, 2007

Is this the first Twitter Ads?

Everyone has noticed the increased Tip: usage on individual tweets coming from Twitter. However, just a few minutes ago, I got this:

twitterad

Has it finally happened? The text says "If you like twitter you'll love ITConversations.com!". I'm pretty sure ITConversations has nothing to do with Twitter.

Anyone else seen something other than "you look *good*"?

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Sunday, October 14, 2007

How Do I Subscribe To Your Blog?

Build A Better Blog Day 12

It must be a habit or maybe some type of obsession, but every time I visit a blog or web site the first thing I do is look for their subscription options. I want to know if I can subscribe to an RSS feed or email notification, and where on the site the link is located. After I've had a chance to read the blog I might want to subscribe to the feed via Google Reader. The most frustrating thing is a site who buries their feed somewhere at the very bottom or camouflaged on the side bar somewhere.

A major faux pas is to not have any type feed available on your blog. More and more people actually read blogs through an RSS reader (there are some reader links here). This process allows the reader to scan several posts from their favorite blogs quickly. If you don't have a feed I probably won't be coming back. When I see a good post title and like what's been written, I might click through to the site and learn more.

Almost every blogging system creates a feed by default. You can provide the feed as a text link, through some graphic, this seems to be standard, or use a service like FeedBurner. Using a service like FeedBurner allows you to see how many subscribers you have, track which posts are being clicked on and gives you the option of adding links to social book marking sites or the comments for the post.

There are many arguments for and against how much of your post is shown in your feed. One camp who says show it all, and a lot of readers agree. They don't want to read a few sentences and then have to click into your blog to read the rest. Sort of defeats the purpose of an RSS reader. The other camp says only show a small part of the post requiring the reader to click through to the blog. This tactic is used when the blog owner wants you to see ads or other eye candy. I admit I used the summary version of my feed until I had several readers tell me they hated having to click through to my blog to read the whole post. I wasn't trying to sell anything so I fixed it. Now I show the whole post.

I read somewhere, and I can't remember where, that if you put your blogs RSS feed link near the top, where visitors would see it quickly, increases the number of subscribers. I don't have any hard scientific numbers, but from personal experience as I wrote at the beginning of this post, if I have to hunt for it I probably wont subscribe. The more subscribers you have the better chance you have of driving traffic to your blog. What ever you decide to do, just make sure you have a feed and make it available to your readers. Don't make them hunt for it. See my main page. The links are right at the top. Easy to see and easy to subscribe.

ProBlogger's day twelve post: Introduce Yourself to another Blogger

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Saturday, October 13, 2007

Linking To Your Archive Posts

Build A Better Blog Day 11

This tip is very simple; when ever you write a blog post try and find a way to link back to an archived post. There are several reasons for this.

  1. Perfect way to lead readers to other relevant posts you've written.

  2. It helps with SEO (Search Engine Optimization). Search engines like Google and Yahoo! like internal link.


There are several blogs on the Internet where they show you the effectiveness if incoming and internal links. One site that I enjoyed and found very valuable was Vandelay Website Design's blog post 3 Powerful Results from Internal Linking. From my own personal experience, without any scientific evaluation, just what I see, external links drive most of the traffic to my blog. Once you've completed a blog post and before you publish, search your site for relevant posts. You might surprised at how many there are.

Link, link, link. I can't say it enough. Take time to link in every post. You may not be able to do it everytime, but try it, you'll like the results. Tell us how you use links on your blog.

ProBlogger's day eleven post: Dig into Your Blog’s Statistics
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Friday, October 12, 2007

Star Trek: The Menagerie Playing In Salt Lake City

That's right folks, the original Star Trek season 1 episode 11, The Menagerie, Parts 1 and 2, will be playing in select theatres Nation wide on November 13th, 2007. These episodes are digitally re-mastered and broadcast in HD. Fortunately for Salt Lake City, the Cinemark 24 at Jordan Landing will be showing will be one of the selected theatres showing these episodes. There is a write up at this link. It looks like the price will be $12.50 for 120 minutes of show time. That's kinda steep, but leave it up to Paramount to gouge the fans once again.
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Make Sure Your Blog Is Mobile Compliant

Build A Better Blog Day 10

This tip is one I have a lot of passion for. I use my mobile MDA to surf the Internet frequently. It's very frustrating when I get to a site that doesn't support mobile web browsers. There's really no excuse for it. There are so many free plug-ins for various blogging systems that your site could be mobile compatible in a matter of minutes.

The major blogging platforms such as MovableType, WordPress and Blogger either support mobile blogging or have plug-ins that make your blog work on a mobile browser. There are also plug-ins specific to Apple's iPhone. The iPhone plug-ins are fairly new but browsing on an iPhone is a little different than a PDA or SmartPhone. These are plugins for WordPress, I use Andy Moore's WordPress Mobile. It was the ability to create posts and upload files to my blog through the mobile browser that hooked me. Now I can post no matter where I am. Although Alex Kings plug-in works just fine it doesn't have creation capabilities at the time of this writing.

WordPress:

  1. Alex King's WordPress Mobile Edition plug-in

  2. Andy Moore's WordPress Mobile plug-in

  3. iWPhone WordPress plug-in (for the iPhone)


I'm not an expert with MovableType so I don't know what's available for that system but I'm sure there are plenty. It also appears that Blogger has built in mobile support, so any of the blogspot.com sites should render correctly.

If you decide to make your blog mobile compliant, and I hope you do, write a new post about it, tell everyone, and you may even create a unique sub-domain like m.digitalthom.com, which seems to be the way current way sites promote a mobile version.

When you get your blog mobile compatible please link back here in the comments and I'll be glad to take a look at it.

ProBlogger's day ten post: Declutter Your Sidebar
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