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Do you Run RSS Ads on Your Main Blog? [POLL] Posted: 06 Aug 2008 01:50 PM PDT It’s time for a new poll here on Problogger - this time the question is: Do you Run RSS Ads on Your Main Blog? RSS advertising has been around for a couple of years now and I see quite a few RSS ads appearing in my own RSS reading - but I’d be interested to know just how far it extends into the blogosphere - so lets see shall we? Do You Run RSS Ads on Your Main Blog? Looking forward to seeing the results of this poll. |
Linkbait, Passion, Fluff and Mixing it Up: Reflections on Content Development Posted: 06 Aug 2008 07:16 AM PDT Today I want to tell you the story of a blogger whose problem that he was too good at getting on the front page of Digg. But first - I want to share a quote from Michael Gray who said something last week that hit the mark for me:
I wish I’d said that. A Blogger With a ProblemI spoke with a blogger (we’ll call him Buddy) last week who presented me with a problem. Buddy’s problem was this: He had been blogging for a year or so and had worked out how to write the kind of content that did well on Digg. In fact he’d perfected the art of writing Diggable content to such a degree that he hit the front page most weeks. As a result he had a blog with a lot of monthly traffic. This doesn’t sound like that much of a problem… well not yet…. Buddy’s frustration was that he had no (or very few) loyal readers. His reflection to me was this:
Buddy asked me if he should stop writing the ‘Diggable Posts’ (the fluff)? My response to him was to try a couple of things: 1. Bring the Digg formula to topics that matter - what if he applied the principles to topics he was actually passionate about? 2. Mix in posts that go deeper - not every post needs to be ‘fluffy’ - in fact I find that a good mix of styles of posts can work well on a blog. A ‘Top 10 ways to…’ ‘how to’ list post one day, a ‘review’ post the next day, a question for your readers the next, a ‘rant’ the following day, followed up by a case study the next day….. etc (you can see 20 types of posts here). What I find is that the ‘fluffy’ posts draw the crowd but the other types of posts actually engage them and keep them coming back. In effect this is what I’ve been doing on DPS and it’s worked well for me. There’s nothing wrong with writing the type of post that could go viral on social media sites - however like Michael says - it’s posts that mean something to you, that are written with passion and that bring out some kind of emotional response in your readers that will make an impact upon people. |
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