Sunday, September 23, 2007

NorthxEast For Sale

WOW!! Collis Ta'eed's site NorthxEast is up for sale.

Collis started NorthxEast not too long ago in February 2007 I believe. NorthxEast was Collis' blog about blogging.

I think Collis' company has some of the best looking websites. Anyway you can read about the specifics on the sale at sitepoint.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

FastStone Capture - Screen Capture Software Review

Frustrated Computer UserToday is Technology Tuesday. I'll review various software and provide other computer tips and tricks that help folks understand their computers "more better". Let me know if you have any computer questions that are challenging you.

FastStone Capture is a screen capture utility that allows you to grab "screen shots" of your computer. Why would you want to do that?

Well, for documentation purposes, "A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words." If you ever have to create documentation where you wished you could provide a screen shot of something on your computer then this software will do that.

Let's say your creating some "How To.." or other type of training documentation and you need to provide various screen shots to help someone understand what you're trying to get across. Screen shots help tremendously.

What I really like about FastStone Capture is its small footprint. The screen below shows what you see when it is running on your computer. A small screen indeed. Which also means that it starts fast.

FastStone Capture

FastStone Capture has a great drawing feature that you can use right after you've taken a screen shot. This allows you to point out various parts of the screen shot and it's very easy to use.

You can download FastStone Capture here to try. If it's something you'll use and want to purchase, it's going for $19.95.

In contrast, there is the Cadillac of screen capturing tools, TechSmith's SnagIt. For $39.95 this does just about everything you need a screen capturing tool to do.

I own both of these programs. I use FastStone most of the time because of it's size (on screen, very small) and speed loading, read quickly.

When I have to get down and do some in depth screen capturing and manipulating then I use SnagIt. A bit bigger on the screen, slower loading, and more configuration options but something everyone would benefit from having in their toolkit.

Monday, August 6, 2007

10 Blog Traffic Tips

Here is an article graciously provided by Yaro Starak of Entrepreneurs-Journey to all the Blog Mastermind students. Hope you enjoy.

Click here to get The Blog Profits Blueprint


In every bloggers life comes a special day - the day they first launch a new blog. Now unless you went out and purchased someone else's blog chances are your blog launched with only one very loyal reader - you. Maybe a few days later you received a few hits when you told your sister, father, girlfriend and best friend about your new blog but that's about as far you went when it comes to finding readers.

Here are the top 10 techniques new bloggers can use to find readers. These are tips specifically for new bloggers, those people who have next-to-no audience at the moment and want to get the ball rolling.

It helps if you work on this list from top to bottom as each technique builds on the previous step to help you create momentum. Eventually once you establish enough momentum you gain what is called "traction", which is a large enough audience base (about 500 readers a day is good) that you no longer have to work too hard on finding new readers. Instead your current loyal readers do the work for you through word of mouth.

Top 10 Tips

10. Write at least five major "pillar" articles. A pillar article is usually a tutorial style article aimed to teach your audience something. Generally they are longer than 500 words and have lots of very practical tips or advice. This article you are currently reading could be considered a pillar article since it is very practical and a good "how-to" lesson. This style of article has long term appeal, stays current (it isn't news or time dependent) and offers real value and insight. The more pillars you have on your blog the better.

9. Write one new blog post per day minimum. Not every post has to be a pillar, but you should work on getting those five pillars done at the same time as you keep your blog fresh with a daily news or short article style post. The important thing here is to demonstrate to first time visitors that your blog is updated all the time so they feel that if they come back tomorrow they will likely find something new. This causes them to bookmark your site or subscribe to your blog feed.

You don't have to produce one post per day all the time but it is important you do when your blog is brand new. Once you get traction you still need to keep the fresh content coming but your loyal audience will be more forgiving if you slow down to a few per week instead. The first few months are critical so the more content you can produce at this time the better.

8. Use a proper domain name. If you are serious about blogging be serious about what you call your blog. In order for people to easily spread the word about your blog you need an easily rememberable domain name. People often talk about blogs they like when they are speaking to friends in the real world (that's the offline world, you remember that place right?) so you need to make it easy for them to spread the word and pass on your URL. Try and get a .com if you can and focus on small easy to remember domains rather than worry about having the correct keywords (of course if you can get great keywords and easy to remember then you've done a good job!).

7. Start commenting on other blogs. Once you have your pillar articles and your daily fresh smaller articles your blog is ready to be exposed to the world. One of the best ways to find the right type of reader for your blog is to comment on other people's blogs. You should aim to comment on blogs focused on a similar niche topic to yours since the readers there will be more likely to be interested in your blog.

Most blog commenting systems allow you to have your name/title linked to your blog when you leave a comment. This is how people find your blog. If you are a prolific commentor and always have something valuable to say then people will be interested to read more of your work and hence click through to visit your blog.

6. Trackback and link to other blogs in your blog posts. A trackback is sort of like a blog conversation. When you write a new article to your blog and it links or references another blogger's article you can do a trackback to their entry. What this does is leave a truncated summary of your blog post on their blog entry - it's sort of like your blog telling someone else's blog that you wrote an article mentioning them. Trackbacks often appear like comments.

This is a good technique because like leaving comments a trackback leaves a link from another blog back to yours for readers to follow, but it also does something very important - it gets the attention of another blogger. The other blogger will come and read your post eager to see what you wrote about them. They may then become a loyal reader of yours or at least monitor you and if you are lucky some time down the road they may do a post linking to your blog bringing in more new readers.

5. Encourage comments on your own blog. One of the most powerful ways to convince someone to become a loyal reader is to show there are other loyal readers already following your work. If they see people commenting on your blog then they infer that your content must be good since you have readers so they should stick around and see what all the fuss is about. To encourage comments you can simply pose a question in a blog post. Be sure to always respond to comments as well so you can keep the conversation going.

4. Submit your latest pillar article to a blog carnival. A blog carnival is a post in a blog that summarizes a collection of articles from many different blogs on a specific topic. The idea is to collect some of the best content on a topic in a given week. Often many other blogs link back to a carnival host and as such the people that have articles featured in the carnival enjoy a spike in new readers.

To find the right blog carnival for your blog, do a search at http://blogcarnival.com/.

3. Submit your blog to blogtopsites.com. To be honest this tip is not going to bring in a flood of new readers but it's so easy to do and only takes five minutes so it's worth the effort. Go to Blog Top Sites, find the appropriate category for your blog and submit it. You have to copy and paste a couple of lines of code on to your blog so you can rank and then sit back and watch the traffic come in. You will probably only get 1-10 incoming readers per day with this technique but over time it can build up as you climb the rankings. It all helps!

2. Submit your articles to EzineArticles.com. This is another tip that doesn't bring in hundreds of new visitors immediately (although it can if you keep doing it) but it's worthwhile because you simply leverage what you already have - your pillar articles. Once a week or so take one of your pillar articles and submit it to Ezine Articles. Your article then becomes available to other people who can republish your article on their website or in their newsletter.

How you benefit is through what is called your "Resource Box". You create your own resource box which is like a signature file where you include one to two sentences and link back to your website (or blog in this case). Anyone who publishes your article has to include your resource box so you get incoming links. If someone with a large newsletter publishes your article you can get a lot of new readers at once.

1. Write more pillar articles. Everything you do above will help you to find blog readers however all of the techniques I've listed only work when you have strong pillars in place. Without them if you do everything above you may bring in readers but they won't stay or bother to come back. Aim for one solid pillar article per week and by the end of the year you will have a database of over 50 fantastic feature articles that will work hard for you to bring in more and more readers.

This article was by Yaro Starak, a professional blogger and my blog mentor. He is the leader of the Blog Mastermind mentoring program designed to teach bloggers how to earn a full time income blogging part time.

To get more information about Blog Mastermind click this link.

Click here to get The Blog Profits Blueprint

Blog Mastermind Review

I'm enrolled in Yaro Starak's Blog Mastermind program. If you want to start blogging or refine your blogging this is a great program.

Click here to get The Blog Profits Blueprint


Yaro offers e-lessons once a week that are packed with quite a few tasks to work on. Some of the lessons in first month of the course includes:

  1. Let's Get Blogging! - This lesson walks you through quite a few topics to think about when setting up the foundations for your blog - what to blog about, what to do if you're not a computer savvy or technical type of person, choosing a domain name, case studies, and the introduction of the Blog Mastermind Group where you hang out with fellow students and mentors to get all your questions answered.
  2. Blog Foundations - This lesson talks about traffic and ways to go about attracting it as well as blog design.
  3. RSS, Social Proof & Plug-ins - This lesson discusses using RSS readers like Google Reader and Bloglines.com to read multiple blogs quickly and to set up an account on Feedburner.com so you can let readers of your blog subscribe to it. WordPress plug-ins are discussed as well as the introduction of tags, permalinks and pillar articles.
  4. Finalizing Your Blog Structure - In this lesson Yaro reviews optimizing your blog for search engines, pagerank explanation, SEO internal structure, sitemaps and more WordPress plug-ins.
These are just a sampling of what is discussed. There are extra PDFs to read as well and all the e-lessons are in MP3 format so you can listen to them whenever and wherever you like.

The forums for students are invaluable especially when it come to technical questions and solutions. Yaro provides case studies of some of the student blogs which is very helpful.

At this point I do recommend this course at $50.00 a month it provides a lot of good stuff to get you blogging in the right direction.

Click here to get The Blog Profits Blueprint

Sunday, August 5, 2007

job-a-matic

While filling out all the necessary stuff for this blog using Blogger, I decided to add Feedburner to the blog and while there, I ran into an option to put my Job-A-Matic website on my blog. So I signed up and there we go.

Now you can look through job listings at http://welcometo.jobamatic.com/.

Check it out for your blog or website at http://www.jobamatic.com/.

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Welcome

My name is David Scott and welcome to wipethat.blogspot.com. I hope to be discussing many different topics here and not just one niche topic.

So again, welcome and we'll see ya' again soon.