Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

How to Select a Blog Template through Blogger


To choose your blog template when you use Google Blogger, you don't have to look outside Blogger itself. Blogger users can choose from a variety of templates that you can access by using the Blogger dashboard:
1

Sign in to your Blogger account.

Your Blogger dashboard opens.
2

From the Blogger dashboard, click the Layout link for your blog.

The Layout configuration page for your blog appears.
3

Select the Pick New Template tab from the navigation bar to open the Select a New Template for Your Blog page.

Each template available from Blogger includes a Preview Template link beneath the template choice box.
4

Click the radio button next to the name of the template you want to preview, and then click the Preview Template link beneath the template box.

A new window that displays your existing blog, formatted with the new template, appears.
5

Click the Close button in the upper corner of the preview window to close it.

The Select a New Template for Your Blog page reappears.
6

Repeat Steps 4 through 6 until you find a template that you like.

Take your time previewing all the different template options that are available from Blogger, to find the one that works best for your blog. Your changes are not final until you click the Save Template button.
7

Click the Save Template button to save your blog with the template you chose.

You can then click the View Blog link to see your changes live on your blog.
Because the Blogger templates are available for free to every Blogger user, the downside to choosing one is that it doesn't make your blog unique. In other words, your blog might not stand out in the crowded blogosphere.

How to Use a Custom Blogger Template


To use a third-party custom template on your Blogger blog, you need to download that template to your computer and then upload it to your Blogger account. Get your custom third-party template onto your Blogger blog:
1

Download the custom blog template to your hard drive.

The custom blog template's designer or Web site should include explanation about how you can download the template.
2

Log in to your Google Blogger account.

Your Blogger dashboard appears.
3

Select the Layout tab from the Blogger dashboard.

The Page Elements page opens.
4

Select the Edit HTML tab from the navigation bar to open the Backup/Restore Template and Edit Template page.

This page offers options to change your template.
5

Click the Download Full Template link under the Backup/Restore Template heading.

The File Download dialog box appears. Backing up your template is an essential step if you think that you might want to revert later to the exact template you were using previously .
6

Click Save.

The Save As dialog box appears.
7

Navigate to the folder on your hard drive where you want to save a copy of your existing blog template and give the file a recognizable name.

Choose a location where you can find the template file if you want to use it again later or create a new folder called My Blog Backups.
8

Click Save.

The Save As dialog box closes, and the template backup file is saved in XML format in the folder you chose.
9

In the Backup/Restore Template and Edit Template page, click the Browse button, which appears next to the Upload a Template from a File on Your Hard Drive text box.

The Choose File dialog box appears. Locate the XML file for the new template you downloaded to your hard drive in Step 1.
10

Select the file, and then click the Open button.

The file path for the XML file you just selected appears in the Upload a Template from a File on Your Hard Drive text box.
11

Double-check the file you selected.

Make sure it's the file you want!
12

Click the Upload button.

Your new template is uploaded to your Blogger account.
13

Click the Confirm & Save button.

The new HTML code for your third-party template now automatically appears in the big box in the Edit Template section of the page.
14

After your new third-party template is uploaded, click the View Blog link to review the look of your blog.

You might want to modify your blog's page elements after you upload your third-party template. For example, you might need to clean up your blog by changing the order of your profile, updating the archives in your sidebar, or adding a graphical image to your header.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Why So Many Blogs Fail (And What to Do About It)

Why So Many Blogs Fail (And What to Do About It)
It’s a safe bet that right this minute, someone, somewhere, is advising a small business owner to start a blog. And it’s an equally safe bet that this blog will be a waste of time.
Blogging used to be an effective strategy, but its current popularity is a holdover. And case study after case study obscure the fact that successful blog-driven marketing campaigns are a rarity; unvisited, abandoned company blogs are far more common.
Blogging is not just one of those strategies that needs to be tailored to specific situations: it’s a strategy that, by default, will fail.
The online content business has gotten insanely competitive since blogging started, and only the most aggressive sites succeed. And there’s plenty of over-optimistic competition.

Why Does This Seem Like Good Advice?

Starting a blog was a great way to distinguish your business from a horde of local businesses offering pretty similar services. Even if you weren’t a great writer and didn’t have a ton of insight, merely giving people an inside look at how the business really worked was enough to give you an edge.
That was true from roughly 2003 to, oh say, 2004. But blogs are no longer unique—if you’re writing a blog, you’re competing on writing quality, insight, and marketing chops.
But if you’re writing a blog to promote a small business, you’re probably a dentist, a plumber, an accountant— you’re pitting yourself against professional bloggers, both in the industry and at local news venues.
On top of that, SERPs are less forgiving than they used to be. In the early days, a local florist’s blog with a couple solid links could rank #1 for a term like “[city name] + florist”.
Now, that blog is below three AdWords slots, seven local results, a list of related terms, and a geographic disambiguation page.
For users, that might be positive: an algorithm designed to detect topical authorities is not an algorithm designed to facilitate transactions, but lots of searches are transactional.
Blogging as a marketing tool relies on a sort of viral loop:
  1. You write something interesting about being, say, a podiatrist.
  2. People hear about your podiatry blog, and link to it.
  3. These links make Google treat you as an authority on podiatry; your site copy indicates that you’re in, say, Des Moines, so they rank you for [Podiatry or something similar] + [Des Moines or somewhere nearby].
Now, the viral loop is more like:
  1. You write the 10th most interesting thing about podiatry that day.
  2. *crickets*
Content produced is growing faster than time available to consume it, so the minimum threshold for interesting content keeps going up.
That’s why big media companies keep launching blogs, and why so many rapidly-growing blog networks focus on consumer-facing content like celebrity gossip.

Idea, Execution, Or Both?

The “macro”-situation isn’t the only problem: even small business blogs that do get read tend to miss some big opportunities.
The classic mistakes that small business bloggers make:
Letting category pages get indexed
The default configuration on many blogging software packages allows massive category pages to get indexed. This does generate some traffic, but mostly from extremely long queries that include keywords found in multiple blog posts. These queries are low-quality traffic with a very high bounce rate.
Not treating blog posts as landing pages
Very, very few people will subscribe to a local business’s blog unless they already like the business. To turn new blog visitors into new customers, every blog post should close with a relevant call-to-action.
If you’re writing about this season’s newest floral arrangements, you’d better be selling them by the end of the post. (That’s going to benefit a blog much more than a comments section with zero comments.)
Prioritizing blogs ahead of newsletters
What’s the best outlet for a small business owner’s blogging energies? A newsletter. Newsletters cut through the clutter, and can be crafted to sell to existing customers. Thanks to services like Constant Contact and Mailchimp, they’re about as easy to set up as a typical blog platform.
Newsletters are a great medium for two-sided offers (“Buy one with a friend, and you each get another one free!”) which can have a multiplicative effect on sales. And posting newsletters to your site gets a big chunk of the benefits of blogging, at a much smaller cost. (It’s no accident that the big group-buying companies are a small business plus email play, not a small business plus SEO play.)

Key Takeaways

These are not purely small business problems, but they’re endemic to the field. The main reason for this is budgeting and rounding: at a big company, someone might work 40 hours per week running an in-house blog and doing related activities.
If they’re not pulling their weight, that will be readily apparent. But at a company one tenth the size, an in-house blogger might spend 4 hours per week on the blog. It’s hard to count that as a direct cost, so it’s hard to measure the return on investment.
Blogging certainly isn’t dead. In fact, its liveliness is part of the problem; there are just too many great writers out there, so competing with them is hardly the optimal way to invest time and energy.
Spend that time cranking out well-targeted, well-crafted static landing pages, and promoting them through email newsletters when it’s warranted.
The net result is the same kind of work, with a much higher return. It won’t show up in fancy case studies or popular blog posts, but it will make an impact on the bottom line.

by Byrne Hobart

Friday, December 2, 2011

Offering Email Subscriptions to your WordPress blog (WordPress.com or self-hosted)


FeedBurner also offers our Email Subscription service, which uses your feed to send an update once each day that you make new post(s) to your blog. If you want to offer a link to subscribe to these email updates to your readers, visit and activate the Email Subscriptions service on the Publicize tab for your feed. Then, copy the "Subscription Link" code we offer into your blog as a "Text" widget under Presentation > Widgets in the WordPress Dashboard for your site.