Tag Archives: Blog Publishing

Changing the format of my blogging for some time

In the coming days I will be experimenting with shorter form of blogging on my Credible Content blog. Sometimes thoughts are more important than how many words one writes. I may not even use images because a lot of times the images are irrelevant, and I had been mostly using them for social media updates.

Yes, even for social media, I won’t be publishing my blog posts keeping social media in mind. If I want to post content on LinkedIn and Instagram, I will create content separately for them.

Regularly updating my blog is more important than worrying about search engine rankings and social media. By not pressurizing myself to reach a certain number of words, I will be able to focus more on the message than the length of the message. This way, if I have to say something in just 50 words, I will say it, instead of waiting for enough time to write 500 words.

5 Benefits of Content Curation

Benefits of content curation

Benefits of content curation.

You curate content when you link to high quality content from other websites and blogs through your own website or blog.

If you’re sharing links from other websites and blogs, from Twitter and Facebook, in a manner, you are already curating content.

To improve engagement and for better SEO, you’re often advised to publish original content regularly.

Unless you’re a big organization and you have a dedicated team of content writers, publishing original, quality content regularly can be quite difficult.

It is not just about writing and publishing, you constantly need to come up with great topics and writing ideas and then publish quality content.

Sometimes, content curation can help you.

Just like you, many people in your industry – whether they directly compete with you or indirectly, or not at all – are publishing quality content.

This is valuable information, and your visitors can benefit from this information.

Just because information is appearing on another’s website or blog, it doesn’t mean your visitors should be deprived of such information.

At the same time, if you are publishing useful information on your own, you don’t want to link to another’s website.

I recommend content curation to my clients when they cannot come up with an interesting topic or when for the time being, we have exhausted all our options.

Content curation happens in 2 manners:

You create a list of all the blogs and websites covering the topic under which you are curating content.

For example, “The top 5 blog posts on the benefits of content curation” and then including links from other blogs with small introductions.

You can simply talk about one topic from one blog and then add your own comments.

In both the cases you are curating content because you are picking up someone else’s thoughts and your either expressing those thoughts as they are or adding your own take.

I normally prefer creating dedicated blog posts for dedicated links. I have rarely created a “list” of other links.

Below I’m listing 5 benefits of content curation.

1. Gives you an unending supply of content writing ideas

Among the top challenges faced by content marketers is producing content consistently and on top of that, making sure that the content remains engaging and valuable.

B2B content marketing challenges

B2B content marketing challenges.

It is important to publish fresh content regularly on your website. There are multiple benefits of publishing regular content on your website or blog.

If you don’t publish content regularly, your current search engine rankings immediately begin to suffer and there is a drastic reduction in the number of people coming to your website.

Your business suffers.

The problem is, regularly coming up with fresh content writing ideas is a big challenge.

Although there are different ways to come up with great content writing ideas every day, sometimes, it is simply not possible.

In such circumstances, through content curation, you can have practically an unending supply of content writing ideas.

Maintain a list of your industry blogs. You can use a content aggregation service like Flipboard, Feedly or Google Discover to track topics.

Whenever you cannot come up with a great content writing idea, quickly go through these content aggregation services and curate something.

2. Drive thought leadership with content curation

Build thought leadership with curated content

Build thought leadership with curated content.

Thought leadership isn’t always about writing and publishing high-quality content of your own.

This blog post rightly suggests that your audience judges you based on the content you share.

Another interesting point mentioned in the above link is that if you never curate content, your website or blog becomes an echo chamber, and you don’t want that.

People want to know what you think of others’ opinions.

For example, on my blog I have multiple times written that I don’t agree that you always have to write 3000-5000-word blog posts for better search engine rankings, as is often suggested by top SEO and content marketing companies.

For better search engine rankings, focus on a topic and provide highly valuable and niche information on it. Even that improves your SEO.

Hence, this is a difference of opinion.

You need to be cautious if you want to build your thought leadership by making content curation an integral part of your overall content marketing strategy.

Always link to high quality and authoritative websites and blogs posts, preferably to thought leaders who are highly regarded.

I’m not saying you don’t link to lesser-known people – make a judgement call. Being an authority yourself, you can easily find out if the content you are curating is worth linking to or not.

3. Improves your SEO

This is something that I have personally experienced.

Suppose I’m looking for some content curation opportunities and on Google I come across a blog post that is ranking at the top.

I write a similar blog post and then link to the blog post that is ranking high, of course, with my own thoughts added to make sure that I’m publishing an original blog post.

I have observed that my blog post with the curated link either begins to appear just below the main link or somewhere on the same page.

Of course, there are lots of other factors that help you rank well, but it certainly helps you improve your search engine rankings if you create/curate content based on blog posts that are already ranking high.

4. Makes your content diverse

As I have mentioned above, you don’t want your blog to become an echo chamber of your own thoughts.

When you curate content, you treat your visitors with diverse opinions or different chains of thoughts even if you don’t agree with them. This gives you a richness.

If your regular visitors are getting bored of (they do) simply reading what you have to say about different subjects, this will give them a breath of fresh air and then they will be ready to come back to your own thoughts.

5. Helps you improve your topic density or keyword density

When you curate content you mostly curate content that is from your own field or profession.

For example, if I’m curating content I am mostly interested in topics related to content writing, copywriting, SEO content, content marketing, email marketing, writing tips, and so on.

My audience comes to read these topics. Consequently, I’m not going to curate content on real estate unless it has got something to do with my profession.

All my topics are going to deal with my profession – writing, content writing and so on.

This increases my keyword density.

Similarly, if you are a financial coach and you curate lots of content on financial coaching, you’re going to increase your keyword density for financial coaching.

Concluding remarks

Normally, when you search for “content curation” and its benefits, you mostly come across blog posts talking about sharing content on social media and social networking websites.

Yes, that too is content curation, but it’s better use is when you use content curation to generate high-quality content for your own blog.

Is there a benefit of posting small blog posts?

Should you publish smaller blog posts

Should you publish smaller blog posts?

I have always believed in the concept of “something is always better than nothing”.

If there is a choice between posting a small blog post and posting nothing at all, I recommend that you post a small blog post.

What am I talking about?

Search engine experts and, to an extent, even Google, recommend that you should avoid thin content.

What is thin content?

Thin content is blog posts and web pages posted just for the heck of it with little content on them.

This Yoast post describes in detail what is thin content.

Over the past two decades, I have maintained multiple blogs.

I had one technology blog. I actively posted content on the blog for two years and it had some decent traffic.

I’m not discussing here why I abandoned the blog, but I would like to focus on what I learned.

Beyond a point, the length or the number of words in your blog post or web page hardly matter.

What matters is the information that you provide to your visitors.

I used to publish quick blog posts on the technology blog randomly, but regularly.

Someday, when I had time, I published 3-4 blog posts. Someday, I published just one. Sometimes, none.

But, in a week, on an average I was publishing 10 blog posts.

Not very big. Never more than 400 words.

It started getting good traffic, if I remember correctly, within four months.

Ever since then, a lot has changed. Even the Google algorithm has gone through multiple transformations.

Now we live in the times of longform content.

At least the concept is promoted by most of the reputed SEO and content marketing companies.

Publish 3000-4000 words, they recommend. Even 6000.

Don’t publish blog posts; publish guides.

A complete guide to this and a complete guide to that.

There is a logic, and I do understand the logic.

When you are writing about a topic, cover the topic from multiple angles under different sections.

This way, when the visitor comes to your link, she finds everything she needs to know about the topic she has just searched on Google.

I do agree: if written well, longer blog posts mean the person spends more time reading these blog posts and this lowers your bounce rate.

A lower bounce rate is good for your SEO.

It is also good for your conversion rate.

Hence, it makes sense to publish blog posts and web pages that extensively cover your topic.

But, you can’t be writing long blog posts all the time.

If you have the budget, if you have the time, sure, you can have a content calendar and you can publish 3-4 4000-word blog posts every month.

What if you neither have the budget not the time?

If that is the case, there is no harm in publishing smaller blog posts.

As I said in the beginning, something is better than nothing.

Make sure you provide value, though. That’s most important.

If you’re simply publishing rubbish, it is going to do more harm than good.

Check out Seth Godin’s blog if you haven’t already done so.

He hardly publishes 100 words.

But, he publishes everyday.

I have been observing his blog for more than 10 years now.

One of the best-known blogs on creating businesses that stand out.

Tiny blog posts.

Of course, he’s not bothered with search engine rankings.

He is a brand in himself.

He has published multiple books.

He constantly has speaking gigs.

Even when he hadn’t authored multiple books, he followed the same format – very small blog posts.

Just a single thought.

The point that I’m trying to make is, focus on delivering value.

Then what about your keywords?

What about covering longtail keywords?

I’m not saying that you always publish small blog posts.

You publish them when you don’t have time.

For example, right now I’m publishing this blog post.

I didn’t have time. But I didn’t want to miss posting an update.

10 Beginners Tips for Business Blogging

beginners-tips-for-business-blogging

Recently someone asked on Quora what would be a better blogging platform: Blogger.com or WordPress? Frankly, I didn’t realize that people are still using Blogger.com for personal and business blogging. So, it came to my mind, there might be many beginners who are looking for some good tips on how to set up a business blog and how to profit from it.

Almost every major business has a blog and it uses blogging to promote its brand, to engage with audience and to draw targeted traffic from search engines and social networking websites. Still, blogging isn’t taken as seriously as a website, especially by the small business owners who haven’t had much time to keep themselves updated of latest trends on the Internet.

Maybe because initially when blogging began, it was an amateur activity. It was mostly journalling. Then started political blogs. Web design blogs. Internet marketing blogs.

looking-for-a-blog-content-writing-service

Business blogging began a lot later, though, even in early 2000’s, I was promoting my business (web design and development) by publishing lots of web design-related web pages on my website. There existed is no concept of “blogging”.

I don’t remember if Blogger.com came first or Typepad.com (powered by Movabletype). Then came WordPress. From the beginning itself you could install WordPress on your website and start publishing a blog. Ever since then I have been using WordPress although these days I routinely publish on Medium too.

Why business blogging is necessary to grow your business on the web

Long gone are the days when blogging was considered an idle person’s pastime. As I have written above, every serious business these days has a blog. Salesforce has a blog. New York Times has multiple blogs. Google has a blog. IBM has multiple blogs. Accenture has multiple blogs. Credible Content has a content writing and content marketing blog.

Every major business and publication on the web has a blog. Is it a fad, or is it a necessity? Or is it just an insatiable desire to reach out to your target audience?

Whether you are a beginner in the realm of business blogging or a seasoned professional, primarily there are 7 reasons why you might be publishing:

  1. A business blog increases content density on your website.
  2. As you cover various topics in your niche, your search engine rankings improve.
  3. You are constantly feeding Google with new content to crawl, index and rank.
  4. People regularly access your website or blog for the valuable content you provide.
  5. You constantly have something new and original to post on social networking websites.
  6. You give yourself and your employees opportunities to share their wisdom and expertise using your business blog.
  7. Eventually, you develop a platform that is independent and doesn’t have to rely on search engines and social networking websites for targeted traffic.

In 2013 New York Times published a negative review of Elon Musk’s Tesla Model’s S car. Elon Musk claimed that the review caused the company almost $100 million.

Musk used his own blog to respond. In the blog he was able to prove what New York Times published was “fake news” and the faults detailed in the New York Times article weren’t actually faults. Consequently New York Times drew lots of flak from Tesla car enthusiasts.

You may say that Elon Musk is one of the most powerful individuals in the world and hence, people would pay attention to his blog.

But the point is, his website has a blog and hence, he has a platform that could be used to counter the New York Times article, the same New York Times that has a well-established publishing platform. In the absence of blogging, Elon Musk would have had to depend on another news publication to carry out his counter argument.

your-business-blog-gives-you-a-platform

This is just one example of how you can use your business blogging platform to put across your own point in the time of bad PR, and many companies are already doing that.

But that’s just one aspect of business blogging.

Business blogging is good for search engine rankings and creating buzz on social media and social networking websites. As mentioned above, when you start writing about your niche topics, you begin to cover all the important keywords and search terms on your blog. Business blogging is the strongest tool in the hands of small businesses.

Since you are continuously publishing your blog, Google’s crawlers begin to crawl your website and blog frequently, even multiple times a day. This way, you not just have better search engine rankings, your latest content is also added to the Google index almost immediately.

Sometimes my blog posts and web pages begin to appear in search results within a minute of publishing.

Ready to publish your blog?

Know more about my blog content writing and consulting services.

Beginners tips for business blogging

  1. Be ready to make a long-term commitment: Business blogging, or rather, any sort of blogging, but especially business blogging, is a long-term commitment. You can’t have 10 blog posts and then be satisfied. Depending on your goals, you should publish a weekly blog post or a daily blog post. If you want to improve your search engine rankings and conversion rate within 3-4 months then I suggest you publish daily. Once you have started getting decent traffic, you can switch to alternative days and then, you can even go for once a week publishing schedule with high quality blog posts. But be ready for a long-term commitment.
  2. Decide on a blogging platform: My recommendation is always WordPress because when you use WordPress (WordPress.org), though, it has a learning curve in the beginning, you own your content. Everything is there on your website. Your own search engine rankings improve when you publish on your own blog. It is an uphill task to build an audience, but in the end, when you begin to get the results, you will realize that all that effort was worth it.
  3. In the beginning, you can also focus on Medium: This, I wouldn’t suggest for every other blogging platform, but Medium is a bit different. More than blogging, it’s a publishing platform. It has a thriving audience and even when you haven’t published many blog posts, depending on your quality, any of your blog posts can be picked up and suddenly, you will have thousands of people reading your blog post.
  4. Develop a unique voice: Your writing style for your business blogging should be conversational no matter how serious your niche is. Through your business blog, you are mostly having conversations with your audience. Write the way you speak. Since every person speaks differently, if you write the way you speak, your blog will carry a unique voice.
  5. Write as a human being: Even on a business blog something like “we do this” and “we do that” doesn’t sound very good and friendly. If you are a single person managing your business blog then it’s very easy to write as that person, but if you have multiple employees writing for your blog, you can create their profiles so that they write blog posts as themselves rather than as a company. This way your audience can relate to the people writing your blogs, and it will feel connected.
  6. Refrain from promoting your product or service on your business blog: This is because when people come to your blog, they are not interested in knowing about your product or service unless they want to read reviews. People are looking for information. They want their questions answered. If they have a problem, they want to solve that problem. It is best to create a list of questions and then create many blog posts providing answers to those questions. This will also give you an opportunity to use your keywords.
  7. Don’t over-use your keywords, but do use them: Business blogging is a great way of covering all your primary and longtail keywords, but don’t make it too obvious. People can easily make out if you are providing useful information or simply covering your keywords. And anyway, when you are constantly providing solutions and answers to questions, you will be automatically covering your niche keywords, so, you don’t have to walk an extra mile to use them.
  8. Learn to market your business blog content: There was a time when it was very easy to find websites and blogs. With millions of websites and blogs being created every week, there is a lot to be found. This is where content marketing comes in. You have to market your business blog. You have to make sure that people are able to find it. The best way to market your blog is to create and maintain interactive social media and social networking profiles. Whenever you publish a new blog post on your business blog, share the link using your social media and social networking platforms.
  9. Focus on networking and guest blogging to promote your business blog: This is something I need to do more but I don’t, but I’m gradually inching towards that. Constantly publishing your business blog on your own eventually begins to get you enough traction, but the real boost you will get by networking with other, already established publishers and industry leaders who would occasionally promote your links on their own timelines and blogs. You can also offer to write blog posts for other publications to expand your presence. You will also need quality backlinks to improve your search engine rankings.
  10. Let yourself loose sometimes: Although business blogging is primarily used to improve search engine rankings and engagement, especially by small business owners, you don’t always have to strictly stick to your topics. Sometimes also share interesting and amusing pieces of information with your blog audience. You can share a funny joke. You can share a GIF that makes people laugh. Or maybe there is a video that is going viral and you can publish it with your own take. Don’t dilute the focus of your blog by more regularly posting such material, but you can keep a 19-1 ratio of such posts with 19 of business-related content and 1 of simple entertainment.

Business blogging is a work of love, commitment and passion for your field. You can publish a business blog on an ongoing basis only when you have got lots to say.

If you think you won’t be able to commit the required effort and time on your business blog, it is better to collaborate with the content writer or a content writing service like Credible Content. My content writers routinely provide high-quality content to business blogs from all over the world.

Do let me know if you are looking for a business blog content writer for your business and I will gladly provide you the needed information.

How To Generate A Steady Stream Of Tantalizing Topics For Your Blog

finding new blogging topics

Business blogs always sound like a great idea, until you run out of interesting things to blog about. We’ve all heard of writer’s block, but “topic block” is another common affliction among bloggers, and it can set in three weeks, three months or three years after launch. Here are a few techniques to help you keep your posts full of information that your audience wants to read, listen to, or view.

Get Help!

Topic block has set in. Now what? One of the most valuable business lessons I ever learned is, when you’ve got a lot of hard work staring you in the face … get somebody else to do it! This technique works like a charm for topic generation. Perhaps the best sources of topics for your blog are your readers, your customers, and your sales and customer service teams — survey these people to get their ideas. This can be done by —

  • Talking to them in person
  • Writing a blog post asking for their input
  • Emailing an online survey
  • Asking publicly or through private messages on social media

The key to making this work is guiding the responses. Asking an open-ended question such as, “What should I write about?” requires the respondent to do too much thinking. Frame your canvassing efforts with questions that facilitate a useful and specific response. Examples —

  • What is your biggest business challenge with (product/service/industry)?
  • What is your biggest operational challenge with (product/service/industry)?
  • What is your biggest financial challenge with (product/service/industry)?
  • How has this (product/service) helped you save money?
  • How has this (product/service) helped you become more efficient?
  • How has this (product/service) helped you?
  • What (product/service/industry) issue confuses you?
  • What do you wish you knew about this (product/service/industry)?

You should include response options if you do an online survey and have some ready if you’re in a live meeting to make it even easier for the respondents.

Look at Keywords

Whether or not you’re worried about SEO for your blog (you probably should be), keywords are an excellent place to mine for blog topics. The keyword data about search terms reveals a lot about what issues are of wide concern, and the language people use to research those issues. Uncovering common issues drives interesting blog posts, and using the popular language in the post title and text attracts blog traffic and holds reader attention.

Online keyword research tools such as Google AdWords Keyword Planner and Moz Keyword Explorer are easy to use and exceedingly helpful. For instance, if you have a food blog and wanted to write about rice pudding, the Moz tool might lead you to consider one or more of the following topics —

  • How to Make Rice Pudding
  • How to Make Rice Pudding From Scratch
  • How to Make Easy Rice Pudding
  • Rice Pudding Recipe With Cooked Rice
  • Baked Rice Pudding Recipe
  • Simple Recipe for Rice Pudding
  • Easy, Creamy Rice Pudding
  • Best Rice Pudding Ever
  • Rice Pudding With No Egg
  • Stovetop Rice Pudding

Note that this type of result can translate into multiple posts around the same topic. In this case, a general “How to Make Rice Pudding” post could be followed up with several more specific posts using titles from the list above.

Also, if your company is running a PPC campaign, you absolutely need to review the keyword data. It will tell you what keyword phrases are generating conversions — which tells you what keyword phrases are generating interest. It’s a must-do topic creation chore.

Stop Writing and Start Talking

A final suggestion for topic generation — probably the most enjoyable and for me, the most productive of all — is talking to colleagues and peers. Co-workers, bloggers in your niche or related ones, and maybe even competitors, are just like you, in the sense they are living, breathing and thinking about the same issues day in and day out.

Whether you talk one on one, attend a local meet-up, travel to a convention, use Skype or social media, you will eventually find people who make great brainstorming companions, and topic ideas will flow like a raging river. The nice thing about this topic-generation technique is that it helps not only you, but also your companions. They will develop ideas to help their business and blog, and may lead to guest blogging opportunities and other forms of collaboration that are good for business all the way around.