Blogging
Blogger and wknd. columnist Kari Heron tells us about the financial implication of a culinary passion
This article has been long in the making. It is one of those that I have drafted and reopened ever so often. now the time has come to put it in print. I have had the privilege of being both a paid columnist for this column as well as a professional blogger with over 17,000 followers for my chefandsteward.com blog over all platforms, and I can tell you that one thing I know for sure is that food bloggers should definitely not work for free. Here is why.
I have been blogging for 10 years, and professionally for six of those. Over the years, I have had many proposals by marketing and PR professionals who are eager to associate with my blog due to the credibility we have developed in the market and our influence. While some of these proposals acknowledge the value of the association, many have assumed that all bloggers, especially food bloggers are in it for a free meal or just “exposure”.
One of the reasons I am so passionate about this topic is because I started out in media pretty early on in life. At 16, I received professional training to become a TV host and eventually made the cut from nearly 300 people who auditioned for a TV show. I got a cheque for each show I appeared on. This was what led me to study Media and Communication up to the graduate level. While in university, I bartered at the largest production training facility to receive master-level training in other subjects like photography, voice and speech. I produced my first TV show, a children’s show, at 19, as part of that barter. Due to all the work I had done before and during university, which I got paid for, I was able to secure a primetime TV job hosting the weather on a national free-to-air station.
I learnt the art of negotiation because I was valued. I was paid. You cannot be called a professional unless you get paid for your work. There has been much debate on this topic in the blogging world over the years. It seems that the divide is in three groups.
Group A: Consists of bloggers who are simply “hobby bloggers”, who do it only for the fun of it and have no desire to ever earn from it.
Group B: Those who may eventually want to earn some day but are trying to build their following in order to attract paid work (via advertising, brand associations, sponsored posts, etc).
Group C: Those who are aware of the costs of blogging and have put a value on their work and expect to be paid for work in cash or kind.
From what I have noticed, for the most part, most bloggers (including food bloggers) operate from the category of Group A. They are in it for the love and freedom of expression. There is no pressure to create and readership is likely to be lesser than other groups. Many of these bloggers are happy to be read, but are perfectly fine with just the ability to publish. They operate on free platforms and only share the foods and dishes they have either cooked themselves, or bought with their own money. Those in the Group B category understand the earning potential of blogging but may just be starting out and are eager to get “exposure”. By this, I mean that bloggers are willing to create content for free in order just to be published. The last category of bloggers have placed value on their time, energy and efforts, as well as the costs of blogging, including the cost of food for recipe development, the cost of photography equipment, and the costs of maintaining a high quality blog, including domain registration, self-hosting, and marketing costs.
In order to understand the value of your blog post, tweet or Instagram post, you have to understand that your time has value. Your creative work has value. In essence, “If yah love it, then you got to put some cash on it!”
Make no mistake, blogging is work. Unless you are gainfully employed and have no wish to ever quit your day job – or gainfully unemployed and have no desire to ever earn a dollar – giving away work for free is not economically viable for most people. “Exposure” cannot pay your DEWA, FEWA or SEWA or phone bills, freelance licence fee, rent or blog hosting fees. You cannot deposit “exposure” in a bank account. And I guarantee you the people asking you to work for “exposure” are themselves getting paid.
When bloggers create content only to be published for free exposure, people who have made their living by providing those services get sidelined. In fact, everybody gets shafted. No one benefits when the market is saturated with free content. If publishers get used to not paying for content, eventually no one will get paid, because anyone will do it for free.
Do not get me wrong, I am not knocking the value of exposure. However, there are ways to give away work without payment, without losing out.
How to convert your passion into a business opportunity
WIFM: You have to ask yourself and the person pitching, what is in it for you as a blogger and for your readers. If there is no value to you or your followers, let it pass.
Develop a rate card. You cannot understand your value without having a guide to your costs. Itemise costs for sponsored posts, photography, writing, recipe development and restaurant reviews (if applicable).
Get featured instead. If you are being featured as the subject of an article, by all means you can and should supply images. By this I mean that you are interviewed (in person or by written question and answer) and that you are not the one actually writing the article.
Charge for recipe development. If you are putting out recipes, then you should charge something at least to recoup the cost of the ingredients and some of your time. For reference, general rates run from Dh350-750 per recipe.
Consider a barter. If it is a brand, product or restaurant you like, consider trading in kind. You need to definitely have your rate card on hand so that you have a frame of reference for the kind of barter and relative costs.
ALWAYS disclose any paid work. I am HUGE on integrity and ethics of blogging (a passion of mine) and feel it is critical to disclose to your readership that the content provided has been paid for or sponsored. Your readership deserves to know.
Bloggers from the UAE, GCC and across the world weigh in on this topic.
Minna Herranen, blog editor at www.nakedplateblog.com
“Ultimately, it’s everyone’s own choice how they want to value their own work. I would not work for free, but my blog is not my work. I always ask, “What’s in it for me?” Or rather, for the audience who follow my blog.
I promote and endorse a cause or product, which I honestly like and fits my lifestyle. It is more often free than sponsored. I do not accept anything in return if I have found something worth writing, cooking, styling and photographing and like to share it on my blog. I have set rules to myself as a blogger and treat my blog partially as a business. Certainly I always consider all opportunities coming my way. I value my time and am dedicated to creating and editing content, which I consider good quality. It’s okay to decline offers which are not win-win.”
Paul Morrison, editor, www.mypatoo.com
“I definitely believe that food bloggers, like any other professionals, should charge. Quite simply, there are overhead costs to conceptualising, producing and maintaining the website. Not to mention there may be recipe developments to be made on the part of the bloggers and collaborators. In addition, we are providing a service, particularly for these restaurants and caterers, to continue refining their end products. Simply put, every service has to be quantified because I guarantee you the costs are real.”
Sharon Divan, www.picklemyfancy.wordpress.com
“My food blogging journey has never been about money! It is not my day job, although I do know of some bloggers who make their living from it. I do it because I am passionate about it and my differentiator has been Chef Talk – a segment where I try and bring out a little more of a ‘personal’ side of the person who puts the food on my plate at a restaurant. For me to charge for meeting such diverse, driven and delightful individuals, would take away from the joy of what I do. I also believe that bloggers are often judged based on their ‘popularity’ on social media outlets and not on content – which unfortunately takes away from those who genuinely put in their time and creativity into their blogs. I believe brands who are looking to tie up with those who develop recipes of their own - whether for magazines, recipe books etc – should pay them for their time, experimentation, creativity. So a lot depends on the type of blog you write and the reasons for which you write it.”
Ishita Saha, www.ishitaunblogged.com and www.foodemag.com
“If you are using the word ‘work’, then it doesn’t imply a service without payment. However, if a blog is born out of passion and is not expected to give you monetary returns, then anyway you shouldn’t be terming it as work. It’s a hobby. Working with brands in terms of content generation and visual conceptualisation is work and has to be remunerated. However, I can’t fathom paid restaurant reviews. But aligning a brand’s USP to its target audience is work – more like what an advertising agency does when it does a marketing campaign. That requires skill. I think the confusion arises because most bloggers aren’t transparent with their disclosures. Also, probably in the beginning, a blogger who’s started a blog as a passion tends to take up the opportunities he/she gets in terms of invites/products, etc, but soon when they realise that this takes a lot of time, that’s when they think of turning it into a profession. And why not? Nobody complains about a doctor taking fees or an actor being paid for a brand endorsement.”
Sachi Kumar, www.wheresachi.com
“There might be many bloggers starting new blogs every few minutes, but that does not mean that if one blogger charges, then brands get to find an alternative blogger who can work for free. Brands need to understand that bloggers who charge are providing quality content which has been curated with a lot of effort and time. They shouldn’t work for free because their style is different from others and the charge is justified with a certain reach of audience, quality and individuality. Sure, it wouldn’t add to the brands’ marketing costs, but brands need to be more smart with whom they work with to ensure their marketing objectives are met.”
Aneesha Rai, www.omnomnirvana.com
“Just because there seems to be an oversupply of food bloggers in the UAE, doesn’t mean that companies/restaurants should expect to work with them for free. People need to sit up and realise that we don’t just spend effort on content generation, but also our time. Content generation can include writing copy, styling and editing pictures for their blog posts as well as social media, which could take hours. Most bloggers receive compensation in kind, than in cash, but sometimes that is not an adequate barter for the job that they do. If compensation is received in cash, bloggers are not aware that they need a business licence to receive it. There also seems to be a sort of dilemma in terms of complete disclosure; it is encouraged, but not regulated. I think food bloggers who create their own recipes have it better in terms of collaborating with brands because it’s a softer endorsement in my opinion. However, the restaurant reviewers have a bit of a struggle ethically and face regular PR pressure to write a good review.”
[“Source-khaleejtimes”]
10 Important Reasons to Work Seriously On Your Small Business Blog
How the heck do they do it?
You know who I’m talking about. I’m talking about those successful small business entrepreneurs who get tons of business and engagement online.
Sure, they hustle just as much as you do. They attend the same networking events. But there’s a difference.
They seem to have much more business than you do. They’re closing more deals. They’re generating more leads through their website.
So what’s the difference between you and them?
They’re probably blogging. They’re probably using their small business blog to build an online audience that is engaged with their brand.
If you’re a small business entrepreneur or solopreneur, you have probably heard of content marketing, right? No doubt you’ve heard of the importance of creating valuable content for your website. But maybe you haven’t taken that first step yet.
A small business blog is one of the most-used and effective content marketing tools at your disposal. Simply put, if you’re not blogging, you’re leaving money on the table.
Here’s some stats for you:
- Marketers that use blogs get 67 percent more leads than those who don’t.
- 81 percent of U.S. online consumers trust information and advice from blogs.
- Companies that blog have 97 percent more inbound links.
- 61 percent of U.S. online consumers have made a purchase based on recommendations from a blog.
- 60 percent of consumers feel more positive about a company after reading custom content on its site.
If you’re an entrepreneur, you need to consider how you’re connecting with your audience. Since you might not have the huge marketing budget of a mega-corporation, you will have to use other means to build and connect with your audience.
One of the best ways to do this is by blogging. It’s been shown to be highly effective at generating quality leads for your business.
Many business owners overlook the potential rewards that blogging can provide. But you’re a savvy entrepreneur, so you’re not going to make this mistake, are you?
This post is going to give you ten benefits that a small business blog can provide for your business. When you read through this post, you will learn various ways you can use your blog to generate more business, earn more credibility and make it easier for prospects to find you online.
Why You Should Have a Small Business Blog
1. Market Research
Having a blog with many articles allows you to more effectively understand what your audience really wants. From the back end of your site, you can spy on what pages people are viewing the most, and this gives you an idea of where their interest lies. When you know what types of content perform the best, you know what types of content to continue to create.
Also, you can use your blog to request feedback from your audience. If you have an engaged following, it’s very likely that they will be happy to answer the questions you have.
2. Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
As you probably know, there’s not much of a point to having a killer website if nobody can find it. One of the biggest keys to getting more traffic is making sure that people will find your site when they use search engines. As a matter of fact, search engines are the no. 1 driver of traffic to content websites! SEO is something that you can’t ignore if you want to have a viable online presence.
The more relevant content you have on your website, the more likely it will be that you will rank for certain keywords. This is where a small business blog comes in. Consistently publishing high-quality content on your blog will do wonders for your search engine optimization efforts.
When you produce useful content, Google’s algorithms will rank your site higher. Over time, your site will make its way to the front page of search results. Not only that, but when people read high-quality content, they’re more likely to link back to it. Earning quality backlinks from other high-authority blogs will do wonders for your SEO efforts.
3. Customer Engagement
Engagement is immensely important for any online business. It’s not enough to just create great content. You also need to interact with your audience as much as you can. You can’t have any success by just talking at your audience. You need to have ongoing conversations with them. It will help you know your audience better. It will help your audience know you better.
That’s what you want.
If you enable comments on your small business blog, you can discuss topics and get feedback directly. This can tell you a lot about your customer base. Not only that. It shows your audience that you are interested in interacting with them. This will increase loyalty and help you form a deeper connection with your audience.
4. Communicating Your Mission
One of the most important components of effective branding is purpose. Connecting with your audience means embracing a unique brand perspective that can give your audience something they can connect with on an emotional level.
This is where blogging comes in.
Your blog is a place where you can communicate your brand purpose. This is important because establishing a strong brand is an important part of encouraging customer loyalty. When you communicate a brand purpose that goes beyond what you sell, it helps you stand out from your competition.
For example, if you are a business that sells vegan meat substitutes, you can express your brand’s purpose by posting animal welfare material on your site. This shows your audience that your company is focused on something more than just making money.
5. Communicating With Customers
If there’s something going on with your service — for example, there will be a planned outage or lack of availability — you don’t have to keep your clients in the dark. Having a centralized place to post announcements is extremely important because people don’t always read their email.
6. You Can Offer Promotional Material
A small business blog is also a great place to offer occasional promotions. If you already have an engaged audience that consumes your content, they will be able to see what discounts or promotions you are offering. It’s a great way to keep your customer base informed.
Sure, you can spread your coupons around Facebook, but it’s better to get into the habit of compelling your audience to visit you at your own site, especially if it’s an ecommerce site. Keep them coming back for more by posting your promotions on your blog.
Here’s a caveat: you don’t want to overdo this. While blogs can be great for offering promotions, it shouldn’t be used solely for this purpose. Most of your content should focus on offering informational value to your readers. If you only post promotional content, your audience will not continue to visit your blog.
7. Showing Your Human Side
People want to know that there are actual human beings behind the business that they buy from. Post some personal stories and talk to your customers through your blog.
This is an opportunity for you to let your personality shine through. When you’re writing blog posts, don’t smack your reader in the head with a bunch of “corporatespeak.” Nobody wants to read that. No really, they don’t!
It’s much better to write in an informal style that people can relate to. When it comes to blogging, it’s not just about what you say, it’s about how you say it.
8. You Can Become a Source of Value
The key to effective blogging is providing value. Nobody is going to read your content unless they get something out of it, right?
If you want to build influence, you have to be valuable. You can do this by providing helpful information to your readers through your blog.
Arjun Reddy, the founder of Super Baby, builds credibility with his website’s “resources” section by giving actionable tips to his visitors.
“Our visitors are parents who are looking for fun ways to help their children become smarter. The advice we give in our resources section is designed to provide helpful parenting tips for our readers.”
The reason Reddy is enjoying success is because he’s providing value up front. When you do this, you show your potential clients that you are valuable to them. That’s why content marketing works. When you’re creating content, you should be asking yourself what your reader is going to get out of that particular piece of content. Each piece of content should be designed to inform, educate, or entertain. If possible, you should do all three!
9. Networking!
When you have built an audience and gained some notoriety, it can attract other entrepreneurs to you. For an entrepreneur, networking is important, isn’t it?
If you’re able to grow your readership effectively, you will gain more credibility. This will attract other influencers in your niche. You never know who might be paying attention right?
This could lead to other opportunities for your business. You might be able to take advantage of the key relationships that you form through your small business blog.
10. Building Credibility
Having a small business blog gives you a presence in your niche. A blog is a record of quality value and experience that you are bringing to your audience. This will give you instant “street cred” when someone finds your content.
Lissette Palencia, CEO of Sleeping Angels has built a steady stream of clientele by using her blog to provide valuable information to her website’s visitors.
“As you can guess, when you run a nanny agency, your clients are parents who are concerned about the safety of their children. They want to do the research first. When they visit our website, they find tons of valuable information that helps them make the right decision for their family. Not only does it inform them, it makes them more comfortable with doing business us.”
This is essential for your business. Your blog is a tool that you can use to establish credibility in the minds of your potential clients. Prospects will read your content and gain value from it. Then, they will become far more willing to buy from you because you have already given them a significant benefit through your blog.
Conclusion
Here’s the thing. If you’re looking to expand your online presence, you need to be creating high-quality content on a consistent basis. A blog is one of the best ways to do this.
These are just a few reasons to keep a blog if you’re an entrepreneur, but there are much more. Just remember that anything that can bring value to your audience is something that you should consider adding to your business.
Blogging Photo via Shutterstock
[“source-smallbiztrends”]
Even since fast Internet connections around the world became the standard, video has been a dominating force online. The explosion of smartphones and mobile Internet only reinforced this trend, as people are now able to watch videos on the go and 24 hours per day.
Guess what, if you want to make money online, you certainly need to consider a strategy that involves video. Below you’ll find some tips to help you in this path.
1. Know The Business Models
There are basically two available business models to make money with online video: release the videos for free and earn with advertising, or charge a fee to let users access your videos.
The first model is suitable for videos that will attract a large number of views on platforms like YouTube or Facebook. Funny videos and videos about celebrities, technology, politics or other popular topics tend to do well under this model. Keep in mind that you will need to publish many videos for this model to become profitable. It’s not uncommon to see publishers releasing several videos on the same day!
The second model is suitable for premium and educational content. For instance, educational videos that teach people how to program or build websites, how to earn money through investing, or how to gain skills necessary to make money on some professional field. The advantage of this model is that you will need to produce fewer videos, but it will take some work to produce the videos and to structure the learning platform.
2. Use a Professional Hosting Platform
Especially if you are going with the second model, using a professional platform to host your videos is essential. Online video streaming is complex, and if you try the do-it-yourself approach you might end up causing problems for your paying customers.
If you need a recommendation, check out UScreen. It is one of the most popular platforms around, and it has the advantage of coming with several other services that you might need for your educational or premium video website.
For instance, they have tools that will help you build your landing page and video pages. They also have built-in payments for both subscriptions and one-time payment for the videos. This can save you a lot of time if you don’t have technical know-how.
3. Have Your Own Website
If you are going to release videos on YouTube and make money via advertising, you might think that you don’t need to have a website. Even if you are going to charge for premium videos, you might be tempted to use some third party platform instead of hosting your own domain name.
This is a mistake. You need to have your own domain and promote it to your audience. That is because your own domain and site is pretty much the only online presence you control 100%. If your audience get used to visiting your site, subscribing to your email list and so on, you will never risk getting cut out of the business by external circumstances.
Imagine the despair of people who published all their videos on an external platform that went out of business and decided to shut down the website! You could lose everything overnight. If you are not a technical personal, check out SquareSpace, as it is pretty easy to build a website with them.
4. Leverage Social Media
Like it or not, social media is an essential part of any marketing plan these days. You will need to have, at the very least, a presence on Facebook and Twitter. Pinterest, Instagram and LinkedIn are also recommended options, depending on your target audience.
Make sure that you share all your videos on those platforms, as they can drive a lot of views. Facebook, for instance, is already the second largest video platform online, losing only to YouTube.
[Source:- Johnchow]
Online Marketing News: The New Influence, Facebook Trend Overhaul, Snapchat TV Style
The Future of Influencer Marketing Research Report 2017
TopRank Marketing and Traackr, in partnership with Altimeter, released a brand new report this week. The goal of this report was to clarify the definition and meaning of influencer marketing and provide solid future direction to influencer marketing programs through research. For example, 71% of marketers said their influencer marketing programs are strategic or highly strategic, but account for less than 10% of total marketing budget. As Lee said in his blog post: “Clearly, enterprise companies need to put their money where their strategy is.” Online Marketing Blog.
Facebook Overhauls Trending and Will Now Show the Same Topics to Everyone
Facebook announced on Wednesday that it won’t be personalizing their list of trending topics going forward, meaning that everybody will see the same stories in Facebook’s Trending section without consideration given to location. This is done in an effort to help users avoid missing important news. Entrepreneur
Snapchat Offers to Bill Brands for Ads Based on TV-Style Ratings From Nielsen
Ad Age reports: “On Tuesday, [Snapchat] confirmed it would let brands plan and pay for ad campaigns using Nielsen’s digital ratings. It’s a small tweak to the ad offering, but comes as Snapchat looks to show that its ads are on par with its digital rivals and traditional television.” Ad Age
Google Developing Robust Mobile Analytics for YouTube
Google is developing a cloud-based measurement solution for YouTube, emphasizing more detailed, cross-device analytics. This means advertisers will now have more detailed insights across devices. Additionally, YouTube will be able to use Google account activity data to influence which users see which ads, and will be enabling YouTube customer match. SocialTimes
Instagram Confirms Live-Streaming Coming to All Users This Week
On Tuesday, Instagram confirmed that their new live-streaming option will roll out this week. According to Instagram, they’re “excited to share that live video on Instagram Stories — a new way to connect with your friends and followers right now — will be rolling out to our entire global community over the next week.” Social Media Today
Who Searches on Bing, and Why They’re Important for Marketers [Infographic]
Bing has grown a great deal since their debut in 2009 — the Bing Network powers searches on Yahoo, Amazon and others. But who is using the Bing network, and why should Marketers care? This infographic gives more details. MarketingProfs
Publishers Made Only 14 Percent of Revenue from Distributed Content
A new report from Digital Content Next, the premium publishers’ trade group, shows that publishers are only making 14 percent of their revenue from distributing their content on third party platforms like Facebook, Snapchat, Google AMP and more. Digiday
Google’s 2016 Bad Ads Report: 1.7 Billion Ads Removed, Including Fake News Ads
Search Engine Land reports: “In its annual Bad Ads report, Google says it took down more than double the number of ads in 2016 that it did in 2015 by removing 1.7 billion ads, compared to the 780 million removed in 2015.” Search Engine Land
What were your top online marketing news stories this week?
We’ll be back next week with more marketing news. If you have something to share, please do so in the comments or Tweet to @toprank.
[Source:- Johnchow]
Do you want to learn how to create a full-time income in your spare time and gain freedom from the rat race? Do you want to learn how I make 6 figure monthly income while traveling the world with my family? Then you need to join me at the IM Freedom Workshop in Los Angeles!
The IM Freedom Workshop is lead by my good friend, Russell Whitney. He’s one of the best Internet marketing trainers in the business.
The IM Freedom Workshop Los Angeles
The IM Freedom Workshop is a FREE 2-Hour Live Events that are held in cities around the world, and it’s coming to Los Angeles this Tuesday Jan. 31 to Thursday Feb. 2.
Each workshop will have both an afternoon session and an evening session. Find the workshop that’s most convenient to you, and register now. Space is limited. Tickets are given out on a first come, first served basis. You must be pre-registered to attend. There is no on-site registration.
What You Will Learn In Only 2 Hours
- The revolutionary “system” that has paid out over $70 million in commissions to people in 38 countries around the world
- How to gain freedom through the power of this System, even if you have no computer skills and have never made a single sale online before
- How you can make high ticket commissions of $1,250, $3,300, and $5,500 just for bringing in leads
- Be given the System ABSOLUTELY FREE if you show up
Isn’t learning how to create a better financial future for yourself and your love ones worth two hours of your time? I know it is for me. Space fills up fast, so go register now. I’ll see you there!
[Source:- Johnchow]
Content Marketing is still one of the best ways to generate leads for B2B companies. Yet many entrepreneurs struggle with creating a successful content strategy.
In reality, you do not need to write hundreds of individual blogs. In fact, one of the best ways to become known as a thought leader in your industry is to take one well-defined topic and turn it into many related content pieces.
Sounds complicated? It does not have to be. Here are three ideas how you can make the most out of the blogs you’ve already written.
1. Turn your key points into social media posts.
- Identify 10 to 15 key ideas, quotes, or data points that can be used as social media posts. Any sentence that is under 140 characters can also be a tweet. LinkedIn and Facebook are not as strict with character limits.
- Find simple images that will support your point. Colorful images increase readers’ attention span by 82 percent.
- Schedule these posts on Twitter every 1-2 days or 1-2 weeks on LinkedIn and Facebook. Organize your posting schedule with tools like Hootsuite Bulk Upload helps with staying focused.
2. Create visual content to support your blogs.
Don’t get stuck in the world of scrolling text. Multiple studies show a significant increase in views and conversions for content with compelling images. There are countless easy and effective ways to make a post visually captivating.
- Take several related blogs (or key points in one blog) and turn them into a simple infographic. If you are creatively challenged, hire a talented Upwork freelance designer to help you.
- You can expand on your content by designing a Preso or a Haikudeck presentation and share it on Slideshare.
- Create a simple video to further explain one of the core concepts. It does not have to be an Oscar-worthy masterpiece. You can use Youtube to convert your presentation into a video. Experiment with live-video streaming options like Facebook live streaming or Periscope.
Remember to create social media posts for each of the content types and schedule them.
3. Write an “expert roundup” blog post.
A great way to get your post seen by as many eyes in your field and in your market is through collaborating with others. Quite frequently your co-authors will share your content via their own social profiles.
- Think about 15 to 20 experts in your field who covered your main topics in the past. Reach out to them with a request to answer a few related questions. You can use a freelancer or a Virtual Assistant to help you research and contact these individuals. Alternatively, you can also post the question with a deadline on HARO.
- Compile the answers into one blog post. Add an easy way to share your content. Click to Tweet works well to encourage others to share your content.
- Once your blog is live, let the contributors know it is available and ask them to promote via their own social profiles.
- Remember to schedule social media posts tagging the contributors. This is another sure way of encouraging them to share your content.
You do not have to write 100 blogs or have a huge budget to succeed at content marketing. You can create a low-maintenance, high-return content strategy if you think about ways to maximize your content via social, various media types and creative ways of engaging other thought leaders.
[Source:- Entrepreneur]
Funding activity in the national capital region witnessed a slowdown with deals signed worth $170 million in 155 transactions so far this year, says a report.
According to ‘VCCEdge Startup Funding Insights’ the NCR start-up ecosystem witnessed funding crunch and attracted $170 million (about Rs 1,140 crore) this year.
“At the going run-rate, funding deals for the year 2016 may not be able to cross the 2014 deal value of $289
million,” the report said.
The year 2015 was a landmark year that registered a deal value totalling USD 608 million as against USD 289 million in 2014.
“The slowdown is attributed to investor pragmatism and selectiveness in funding enterprises that have business models that best optimise the funding they receive. Start-ups have to, perforce, ‘Conserve and Grow, or Perish’,” said Nita Kapoor CEO of News Corp VCCircle.
Since 2011, NCR has witnessed 873 funding deals to the tune of $1,571 million of the total $6,721 million
across 3,682 deals in India, the report said, adding “this represents 24 per cent of the total number of deals and 23 percent of the total deal value”.
The top venture capital deal was the investment of $17.19 million made by Sequoia Capital India, Omidyar Network
India, Maverick Capital, and HBM Partners in the Gurgaon-based healthcare startup, 1MG Technologies.
The top angel/seed funding deal was that of online gaming company Gamooz Interactive Solutions that saw funding to the tune of $15 million made by angel investors such as Taha Nabee, Anupam Gopal Mittal, Anand Kumar Ladsariya, Devesh Ghanshyam Chawla, Suneel Bandhu and Miten Mehta.
Food-Tech topped the table in terms of number of deals with 50 investments worth $28 million since 2011. While,
travel technology players saw maximum fund flows to the tune of $80 million across 46 deals since 2011.
Meanwhile, enterprises in the Edu technology space attracted $36 million across 39 deals since 2011, the report added.
[Source:- firstpost]
Blogging is one of the most creative mechanisms for self-expression in the 21st century, but it’s more than that. It’s almost a lifestyle choice, like journalism or painting gigantic wall murals on impressive buildings.
How do you create a popular blog?
First, establish some ground rules of best practices; second, choose the most suitable platform for your type of blog; and third, use an editorial calendar to stay consistent about blogging.
Let’s take a quick look at each of these 3 key ideas:
- Blogging Best Practice
While there are many possible best practices, 3 ideas that will be simple to remember and that will make a significant difference are mindset, maintenance, and relationship building.
- Mindset
Top bloggers treat blogging with respect. They consider it an art form. For them, blogging is about writing a theme that develops over time. They also clarify their message through the perfect selection of graphics.
While it’s easy to be casual about blogging, it should be treated as seriously as if you were a novelist or fine arts painter. It is this reverent attitude toward blogging — treating it as an art form — that is responsible for the success of those blogs that attract a million or more readers a year and earn 7 figures.
- Maintenance
A novelist has to work at tidying up his research notes after an evening of intense writing. A fine arts painter has to clean up her studio after a morning of inspired work. Without these housekeeping rituals, a chaotic environment would destroy their creative output.
In a similar way, a blogger has to do housekeeping. Essentially, this consists of updating platform versions, antivirus definitions, and plugins and backing up files. A conscientious blogger will have all the tools they need at their immediate disposal – like an external hard drive or a Secure USB to protect files or the website from malware when making site backups or moving files between computers.
- Relationship Building
A blog is different from most traditional media in that readers can immediately respond to the author. This is a powerful feedback loop. The audience gets to share their reaction while the writer gets to know his or her audience better.
It’s also possible to deepen the relationship with the audience when the writer comments on their comments. This creates a dialogue and a sense of community around a shared interest.
In addition, a relationship can be built through an email newsletter that informs subscribers about new posts.
- A Content Marketing System
Insisting that one content marketing system is the best is like telling someone who loves a Mercedes that all other cars are not worth buying. If you happen to be a Tesla aficionado, these are fighting words.
With that said, out of the thousands of Content Marketing Systems available, Joomla, Drupal, and WordPress stand out as the most popular by a substantial margin. Still, while these get the highest votes on any blog discussing the best CMS platforms, it’s important to remember that there are other platforms that are easier for new bloggers, better for complicated projects that require a more sophisticated framework, and more convenient for users who need a blog for multilingual purposes.
Joomla
Joomla is popular because it’s easy to build out a basic blog with only a few computer skills and it’s easy to get online fast with a professional looking site. In addition, it has many templates, huge community support, and extensions that can do almost anything.
Drupal
Drupal is popular because it’s simple to set up a basic site with many features that make it easy to get going quickly. It has a solid framework with superb internal APIs. It’s robust enough to do complicated things without coding from scratch.
WordPress
WordPress is popular because like Joomla and Drupal it’s easy to setup, even if you have few computer skills and no idea how to code. In addition, users like the plugin stability, autonomy, functionality, and versatility. WordPress also offers a multisite option, is easy to use, and offers a staggering range of themes.
A Content Marketing Editorial Calendar
A content marketing editorial calendar makes it easier to be highly strategic about regular blog posting. It differs from a traditional calendar in that it works more like an Electronic Document Management System (EDMS), giving you the versatility to do the following things:
- · Note down great post ideas that occur to you in the middle of the night.
- · Assign all writing and editorial tasks to your team.
- · Map out a publishing schedule that helps improve SEO and build an audience through consistent content creation.
- · Make any adjustments to your blogging process with ease.
- · Provide a visual tool for your marketing strategy that even non-technical staff members can understand at a glance.
- · Act like a bulletin board in a cafeteria that informs everyone about the latest updates.
It’s like Owning Your Own Newspaper
Owning a blog is a little like having your own newspaper. It’s a place one where you not only get to share your ideas on your favorite theme to a receptive audience but where you also get to deepen your knowledge by researching and writing about something in-depth. Besides writing, you can add value to your blog by making videos and offering informative e-books.
Introduction
Moving hosts, especially if you run a Wordpress blog can be a bit of a daunting experience. Especially if you’ve never done it before. In reality, it’s actually quite easy to do – but only if you know how to do it! This article is not designed to be a step by step run through of how to migrate a Wordpress blog to a new host but more of a quick run down of the certain factors you’ll need to consider. Who knows, you might read this and think of something you’ve missed or it might just give you something to consider.
Finding a Host
Choosing a host is actually the easy bit as pretty much all of the web hosting companies out there offer a solution for hosting Wordpress blogs. It’s the most used platform on the Internet so you’d expect that the majority of people would support it. You can also find web hosts who offer packages that are tailor made for Wordpress installs. They don’t differ much to regular hosting packages but they come with optimised features with the server side software that Wordpress needs to perform at its optimum.
One thing you should consider is the sort of package you need, like with any site. If you choose a package that doesn’t have the resources your site requires you’re going to run into problems. The same goes for any site, not just Wordpress. You need to choose a package that matches your requirements be it shared hosting, reseller, cloud or even a fully dedicated solution if your site/traffic warrants it.
Typically, Wordpress sites need a lot of bandwidth, disk space and memory – so pretty much everything!
The Database
The Wordpress database is one of the things that confuses people. In reality, it’s simple but it’s often overlooked. The main thing where people go wrong is getting the configuration wrong. In your wp-config.php file, you will find the username, password, prefix and hostname fields to fill in. Be sure that these fields reflect your new host and not just your old host. Lots of people simply setup new credentials, put their database up to the new host and then wonder why it doesn’t work. Either keep the credentials the same or make sure you change the credentials to reflect the new host.
The Install
For the install, you have two choices. You can either upload everything you took from your old host or you can do a fresh install. What most people opt to do is install a fresh install of Wordpress on the new host. You can do this manually or via one of the many packaged software installers that come with your hosting package. Once you have a barebones Wordpress install in place you can them simply change the configuration to connect to your old database and upload your existing theme to the necessary theme folder (more on this below).
If your database is old, structurally, then your new Wordpress install will adjust your database to suit.
The Theme Directory
All of your Wordpress Themes will be stored in the wp-content/themes/ folder and if you don’t have a new theme, now is the time you should be getting one. If you make sure that you’ve downloaded your old theme and uploaded it to this folder then everything should be as it was on your old host. If for some reason it’s not, you can check in your Wordpress back end to make sure that the right theme is selected. Sometimes if you try and access your site before you’ve uploaded the theme Wordpress will update to the default theme. So you’ll need to switch it back.
Conclusion
So there you have it, if you follow these points you’ll end up covering most of not all of the bases for your Wordpress migration. If there is anything else we’ve missed feel free to let us know. If you get a good host, your database setup right, your wordpress files uploaded and your theme setup correctly you’ll be well on your way to a nice, clean, fresh install!