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Winning strategies for your eBay and Internet business.
Thalia Miller is an eBay enthusiast, author, artist, mother, wife, and entrepreneur with strong Christian values. She lives in the middle of nowhere, just north of Dallas, Texas.
For more info visit: http://www.bohemiattic.com/album.htm
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I've been focused on the blog thing here of late. Mainly because I read an excellent article, "Why Marketers Should Blog". Blogs have been around for years but are quickly becoming fashionable, especially in the business and marketing world. This surge to mainstream acceptance is partly due to the ease recently attributed to blogging. Web logging has evolved from the first bulletins (we didn't even use a mouse then!), forums, and user groups to a slightly more sophisticated means of syndication now. Developers have created amazingly simple methods of posting blogs through several applications. The most common one is the push-button publishing method.
A lot of folks are still in the dark about this RSS feed business. The term RSS refers to a syndication format, also known as Really Simple Syndication or Rich Site Summary. Each RSS feed is simply a text document containing a list of content items including the headline, description and link for content items available on a web site. RSS feeds were initially used online by the news media. In short, this RSS feed is a FREE way to go global with broadcasting your message. It's similar to setting up your own web, except that it has been made much simpler and the feed is a way to share your content with your readers and even other publications, a way to "syndicate". RSS readers allow you to subscribe to RSS feeds much like web browsers allow you to view web pages. The RSS reader will automatically update on some regular schedule and display the new articles from the feeds you have supplied to the reader. Some RSS readers notify you when a new item has appeared from one of your feeds. When you have opened the RSS feed in your browser and see the XML data, then highlight the URL of that feed and copy it to your clipboard. Then, return to your RSS reader and follow the instructions for your particular reader for adding a new feed. The URL you copied to your clipboard will be the location your RSS reader will require to subscribe to that feed. If you've ever loaded the eBay Merchant Kit on your web, then you'll immediately see the correlation to this method. It's basically a snippet of code.
In the time it takes to write an email, you can put opinions, thoughts, sales messages, promotions, product announcements, relevant issue topics, tips, anything you can think of writing can be put in a Blog. You can utilize tools to add pictures, audio and video, much the same way a regular web works. There are roughly over 3 million Blogs online. However, only a tiny tiny percentage are being used to increase business and site traffic online. You can easily do this and blow your competition away, get tons of traffic, and increase your sales. If you've read the Advanced Power Selling Book, you'll remember the marketing strategy to spread your listings and get more hits. Well, this can be achieved just as easily using your blog and in addition to the other methods!
This is what I've learned in a nutshell, but there are great tutorials out there for further research. First, the site from which you set up your blog should be rich with resources. Secondly, don't get frustrated. I've been developing online stuff for ages (10 years or so) and I still get to play on the learning curve here. Check these additional links to sources I have found helpful: Tom Peters (this will send you to his page on RSS but his whole site is awesome!), Rodney Rumford (this link will send you to his FAQ on RSS but also links to his blog which is helpful), Master New Media (this site has a little info on all things marketing including the wonder of blogs and RSS), Stampede System (This one has a free e course for learning how to drive traffic to your blog), RSS Exposed, and Blog Profits (this site currently has a free course). Also, the first link I mentioned, Why Marketers Should Blog, includes multiple ways to market your blog, which I'll be taking advantage of once I have my web set to go at the end of this year (a few days from now-- phew!).
So, please feel free to let me know how your blogging is going. Drop a line with your blog and if I get a chance, I'll try to stop in. Happy blogging! Thalia
Thank you Linda for your kind comments. I enjoyed your writing style very much and look forward to your upcoming posts as well. Many blessings for a great new year to you, Thalia
Found new stats of interest from http://directmag.com/ (great resource btw)
"They're Everywhere! (But What Are They?): Weblogs have turned out to be the iPod of 2004, a lifestyle product that defines its user. They began attracting mass attention during the early weeks of the Presidential primaries, and grew throughout the year to make the cover of Fortune magazine's 'Top Tech Trends of 2005' issue. Now the Pew Internet & American Life Project has put a tape measure to the trend. They found that blog readership grew sharply from February to November 2004, up 52% from the previous year. Fourteen million Americans -- 12 percent of Internet users -- posted comments or content to a blog run by someone else in the last year. However, offsetting that growing awareness, 62% of adult U.S. Internet users still don't know what a blog is." :)
Web Marketing: Why Blogs Matter to You
SEARCHLINE Obviously blogs have an impact on the folks who create them -- about 8 million people in the U.S., according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project -- and those who read them (32 million, per the same study.) But the Pew research also found that 62% of American Internet users still don't know what a "blog" is. What difference can this blogging trend make in their lives? If they search the Web, it does. Search engines like Google and Yahoo spider blogs extensively because they have two attributes the engines value: a continuous stream of fresh content and lots of links, both inbound and outbound, suggesting popularity. The blogging influence on search, and thus on search engine marketing, is real. Unfortunately, some of that influence has been less than benign. Recognizing that the engines rely heavily on blogs, some Website owners have manipulated that system by posting links to their URLs in the public comment boxes provided at the end of many blog stories. This can increase their Web traffic, but more important, it can produce higher organic rankings for their sites on the search engines, since search crawlers find those links and assume they're from legitimate posters. The insertions can be done automatically by bot software, so abusers don't even need to invest sweat equity in inflating their page ranks. Beyond this sort of "comment spam," Gene McKenna, chief technology officer for online marketing firm Digital Impact, says there are numerous synergies among blogs, search, and the Web that will permit coordinated cross-channel marketing. Of course, the most basic of these is to create your own blog, but that's tricky. Blogs need care and feeding. Their high refresh rates are part of their attraction for search engines, so a blog that lies fallow won't help a company's Web ranking. To read more about the marketing challenges and opportunities created by blogs, visit DIRECT.
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