Jack of All Blogs https://jackofallblogs.com Ins and Outs of Running A Blog Network Tue, 12 Sep 2017 05:29:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 How to Show Author Info in Search Results https://jackofallblogs.com/networks/how-to-show-author-info-in-search-results/ Sun, 06 May 2012 06:02:07 +0000 http://jackofallblogs.com/?p=221 The Google search engine values quality content. As such, it shows only in its top search results great content from trusted authors whether they’re sharing it on a website, blog or article directories. This is known as the author markup feature. The good news today for authors who are passionate about sharing original and quality information is that their name can now be displayed in Google’s search results. This helps internet users easily find useful and valuable information that they need from specific writers. So for example, when a person now searches for a particular topic which you’ve written about, your name will show in the results. The trick to doing this is to link your content with your Google+ profile. Make sure you create a profile in Google’s social media platform first and include a clear and good headshot photo. The next step is to verify authorship of your content. You can do this by connecting your articles with your Google+ profile. You have two options available. First, you can use a verified email address. If you have a Gmail account, you can very well use this. Secondly, you can set up authorship by linking your Google+ profile with your content. What will happen then is every time you publish new content, it will also show on your Google+ profile. This is a great opportunity to gain links and +1s to your articles wherever they may be posted. Finally, do not forget to include the +1 button on your website or blog and use the author markup to link your content and Google+ profile page. Photo courtesy of Techlila

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Cool WordPress Plugin for List Building https://jackofallblogs.com/networks/cool-wordpress-plugin-for-list-building/ Sat, 11 Feb 2012 07:13:41 +0000 http://jackofallblogs.com/?p=172 Having a blog is a great way of sharing valuable information and gaining followers as well as potential clients. As long as you regularly update it with fresh and interesting posts, you can be sure to attract more visitors as time goes by.

WordPress is one of the most widely used today because it’s very easy to use. If you’re one of those using this blog platform, you have the opportunity to store a database of people interested in what you do or in what you may be offering, whether it’s a product or service. This list building plugin is called PopUp Domination. Publishers and bloggers who have been using this tool claimed they experienced a significant increase in their subscribers in a matter of a few days only. As its name suggests, this list building plugin pops up on your screen when you visit a particular blog or website that has installed this tool. It asks for your name and email address in exchange for a freebie such as an e-book, special report or a subscription to a newsletter or updates. This PopUp Domination tool is very effective on blogs. Apart from your free offering, any user can customize the theme to make it attractive to visitors. You can include an image, details of your offer and additional call to action to prompt visitors to sign up. This WordPress plugin has been updated early this year as a result of the release of WP 3.3. The update was made after users complained about compatibility problems and rest assured that the tool now works well with the latest WordPress version. Photo via Winkpress

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How to Drive Followers to Your Blog https://jackofallblogs.com/networks/how-to-drive-followers-to-your-blog/ Sat, 22 Oct 2011 17:03:26 +0000 http://jackofallblogs.com/?p=144 Amassing followers and repeat visitors to your blog is the best way to build your reputation in the blogging world, and here we will look at some of the key ways you can boost your number of followers.

Create Unique Content

The simple fact of the matter is that no one will repeatedly come to your blog if it isn’t offering anything new. Maintaining fresh and interesting content is a sure way to improve the readability and interest of your blog to newcomers. Make sure you know your niche thoroughly and are in tune with subjects they want to read about, while at the same time adding your own individual angle in posts to keep them coming back for more.

Optimize Your Posts

A little SEO is essential if you want people to find your blog online. The best way to optimize your blog is by tagging it with relevant keywords that people search for online. Remember, with tagging the general rule is the more keywords the merrier, as it makes it more likely for your site to be visible to a wide range of people. Make sure you optimize each post as well to include a certain number of keywords that people are looking for – just be careful not to over optimize it as this may result in Google thinking the page is spam and blocking it from its results.

Invest Time in Others

Nobody wants to follow a blogger who doesn’t take the time to read their own writings as well. Not only will following other blogs expose you to a larger readership group, but if the blogs you follow are relevant to your own then you may get some new ideas for additional blog posts. You should also make sure you have a ‘follow’ button posted on your own blog so that people can follow you if they like what they read and want to interact with you.

Offer Advertising

You don’t necessarily have to partner with big corporations to get involved in advertising. If you want to really establish a connection with your followers, offer to promote their own blogs and writing on your pages. You could even add their pictures and other content onto your blog, if they let you.

Promote Your Blog

Social media services like Facebook and Twitter are great arenas to use when you want to promote your blog. On Twitter you can link your posts to hash tag conversations in order to expose your writing to an entire world of new bloggers. You could also try social bookmarking, a process that sees your blog promoted on a host of social networks all at the same time.

Following these simple techniques should help you increase the number of repeat visitors to your blog and gain new readers in no time.

Yuri is an customer relations, he also works in area of temporary staffing services and recruitment. When we asked him to talk about few good staffing services, this is what he had to say: Try out Adecco USA temp staffing services they know what they are doing, currently leader in the industry.

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Gawker Media Redesign: It’s Genius But Blogging Is So Old-Skool Media Alike https://jackofallblogs.com/networks/gawker-media-redesign-its-genius-but-blogging-is-so-old-skool-media-alike/ Sat, 18 Dec 2010 13:46:07 +0000 http://jackofallblogs.com/?p=96 [dropcap]F[/dropcap]or several weeks already Gawker Media has been running a public Beta version of the upcoming new look and format. In a recent entry Gawker Media Guru founder Nick Denton announced the upcoming format and explained the change in approach. Denton said that Gawker was ditching the blog format and moving beyond. Moving to a format more known from MSM, AKA old-skool media.

Changing Formats

While Denton went for the juiciness and opted for a baity title, picked up by several writers, let us first make it clear that Gawker Media’s redesign does NOT ditch blogging but the classic blog design format.

A blog (a blend of the term web log)[1] is a type of website or part of a website. Blogs are usually maintained by an individual with regular entries of commentary, descriptions of events, or other material such as graphics or video. Entries are commonly displayed in reverse-chronological order. Blog can also be used as a verb, meaning to maintain or add content to a blog.((Source: Wikipedia)) [Emphasis mine]

It is clear that Denton has ditched the term blog(ging) for a long time already, a sentiment also expressed in a Tweet during the heat of Gizmodo’s ‘Lost iPhone 4’ scoop. Gawker Media has, for quite some time, become ‘genuine Media’ already. It ditched the term blogging as a verb, as brilliantly worded by former Valleywag contributor Paul Boutin for Wired.com more than two years ago:

Writing a weblog today isn’t the bright idea it was four years ago. The blogosphere, once a freshwater oasis of folksy self-expression and clever thought, has been flooded by a tsunami of paid bilge. Cut-rate journalists and underground marketing campaigns now drown out the authentic voices of amateur wordsmiths. It’s almost impossible to get noticed, except by hecklers. And why bother? The time it takes to craft sharp, witty blog prose is better spent expressing yourself on Flickr, Facebook, or Twitter.

The time to retire the term ‘blog’ has come.

In other words, using the term blogging to describe professional citizen journalism is outdated and calling sites such as Gawker, TechCrunch, and other popular online publications a blog often is wrong and these sites, previously called blogs, often are journalistic publications. In an otherwise excellent recap, Wired.com’s Dylan Tweney totally misses this point and, like others, completely digs into Denton’s announcement article title: Gawker Gives Up on Blogging (And That’s a Good Thing). The correct title would be: Gawker ditches the blog [design] format. A format also defined in Wikipedia’s Blog entry, which I take the freedom to rehash here although already quoted and emphasised above:

… Entries are commonly displayed in reverse-chronological order…

The real question I have is: Why did it take Gawker that long to move to a format already popularised on smaller blogs and sites since mid 2007, when Darren Hoyt released his first Mimbo Theme ((A magazine theme for WordPress)) ?

Why Does The New Gawker Look Like BBC News?

When I first saw the new Gawker design, my first idea was that the design was aimed to push more traffic from the homepage, a strategy popularised by magazine-like themes and seen on sites such as AOL News, our own redesigned BBC News and the New York Times? While the position of the latest headlines block might be called controversial by advertising gurus, and one could expect a possible return of the left-sided skyscraper, the Gawker 2011 redesign does not introduce anything new. It merely rehashes many popular aspects of news-based web design such as a lead story, section blocks dominated by story tiles, and – last but not the least – a huge amount of links, rather than content on the homepage. Just like the BBC News homepage. Even the prominent display of the latest headlines, a smart way to improve page views on an otherwise very scarce design, is an approach used by many online publications, albeit not always positioned as high in the right sidebar. Just like on almost every BBC News article ((In a section with also most commented and most shared stories separated by tabs)). So why is the 2011 Gawker redesign hyped and discussed?

The real question is ‘When Will We Retire The Term Blogs’?

Denton’s announcement carried the clear message that the British born former Fortune journalist does not want his sites to be called blogs anymore and that they true media/journalism are. The guru, and doom predictor, understands the internet better than most bloggers and has long ago mastered and taught his crew the art of media and writing for the web. The art of the title and ‘co-owning’ stories are not Gawker exclusives, or attention points, but old MSM strategies used by almost any major publication and outcries by bloggers who feel abused when their scoop is stolen but not accredited don’t matter much. While accreditation might be nice and the ethical thing to do, in many a country accredited journalists do NOT have to cite their source and will never do so. Even one of the best Gizmodo entries ever, the SR-71 Blackbird piece, was compiled from several sources and initially did not have correct attribution. The real problem though is that many sites and bloggers are stuck in their love for blogs, awarding the term a special meaning rather than defining it as what it truly is:

A collection of entries published online [often] without editorial control before publication.

Can we retire the term blog and become writers again, columnists, for those who highly value the editorial content freedom?

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