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Hand-Picked "Best of the Pro Blogger Blogs" (Beta)

FaviconDotWeekly.com Domain Name Blog

Wordpress Contact Form Plugin: Contact Form 7 1 Jul 2009, 2:59 pm

Since I have been building several new sites lately, one thing I have been in need of was a nice easy plugin for making a contact form on my contact us pages. I have found it in the form of Contact Form 7. This plugin makes it about as easy as one can get! No coding [...]

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Favicon(title unknown)

British Court Rules Against Anonymous Blogging 17 Jun 2009, 11:52 am

British court has ruled that bloggers operating anonymously have no right to keep their identities secret. Times Online reports: "In a landmark decision, Mr Justice Eady refused to grant an order to protect the anonymity of a police officer who is the author of the NightJack blog. The officer, Richard Horton, 45, a detective constable with Lancashire Constabulary, had sought an injunction to stop The Times from revealing his name..."

Read full story: Times Online

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FaviconDomain Name News, Domaining Tips and Tricks by ChefPatrick.com

Controversy Around Facebook.com/ProBlogger 15 Jun 2009, 4:32 pm

I am the person that took the Facebook vanity name ProBlogger. For those that are not aware, ProBlogger is a term used by the highly popular blogger Darren Rowse. The big question on Twitter and Facebook seems to be why did I take that vanity name? The consensus is that Darren deserves this address because of [...]

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FaviconDotWeekly.com Domain Name Blog

WordPress Releases Version 2.8 (Barker) 13 Jun 2009, 1:08 pm

The super powerful content management system WordPress released it’s latest version today, 2.8. Fixes include 790 bugs (not sure where they were, but that’s what they said) and is reported faster with several improvements. DotWeekly is run with the powerful WordPress system. Here is the direct link to the WordPress.org 2.8 version. There is a video showing [...]

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FaviconDotSauce Magazine

SEO Advice of the Year! Google’s Matt Cutts on Successful Blogging 1 Jun 2009, 7:07 pm

Matt Cutts is head of webspam team and the respected voice of Google for web developers. Matt recently gave a presentation on the subject of SEO and blogging at WordCamp San Francisco and has been kind enough to share his presentation with everyone.

The presentation is titled, “Straight from Google: What You Need to Know” and provides excellent advice and insight from Google on optimizing WordPress for search engine ranking.

Please browse through the slides and read the highlights below the presentation. A video version may be coming soon.

Straight from Google: What You Need to Know

Matt has also provided a link to download the presentation in PowerPoint format.

Highlight Slides from the Presentation

  • Slide #12: Use WordPress to get a head start!
  • Slide #13: Basic but essential WordPress Plugins.
  • Slide #21: SEO Tip - Choosing content keywords.
  • Slides #22-#23: Ask yourself, “What will my visitors type?”
  • Slide #26: Tweak your titles, URLs and content.
  • Slide #27: Use keywords as categories and use dashes between words.
  • Slide #29: Be passionate, write often, but don’t over do it.
  • Slide #34: Be useful, creative and informative.
  • Slides #36-#39: Use Google’s free Webmaster Tools to optimize.
  • Slide #46: Save the Internet! Support net neutrality.
  • Slide #48: WordPress Security - Block access to wp-admin with htaccess.

As you can see, this presentation was a wealth of information, thanks Matt!

Pass it along to your fellow bloggers and developers!

If you have any questions or additions to the topic of SEO and blogging, the comments area is always open.

This article is from DotSauce.com Domain Name Magazine.

SEO Advice of the Year! Google’s Matt Cutts on Successful Blogging

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Faviconygrab.com

How To Make Your WordPress Blog Mobile 26 May 2009, 8:52 am

Alright i know that the presence of the mobile Internet is growing by the day. As some of you may know i was out and about this weekend and i just happened to visit Domaining.com on my Centro and found that there was a mobile version of the website. Kind of made me happy at [...] Related posts:
  1. Mobilized Websites Are Important
  2. 5 FREE WordPress Themes NO ONE is Using
  3. 7 Essential Wordpress Plug-Ins

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FaviconWaxy.org

Cheap, Easy Audio Transcription with Mechanical Turk 22 Sep 2008, 6:16 pm

After recording last week's interview, I was left with a 36-minute MP3 and a profound feeling of dread. You see, I hate transcribing audio. I used to transcribe interviews in high school, and it's always tedious, taking upwards of eight times the length of the clip itself.

Bracing for a good four or five hours of rewinding and writing and rewinding, I remembered that this is The Future! So, instead, I tossed the job over to the global anonymous workforce at Amazon Mechanical Turk instead.

The result: my 36-minute recording was transcribed while I slept, in less than three hours, for a grand total of $15.40.

This is a fraction of the cost/time of any other transcription service online, including the Turk-driven Casting Words, though you potentially sacrifice some quality. In my experience, though, there were virtually no errors.

Here's how to do it yourself, with no programming knowledge required. The instructions below are verbose, but using my template, it shouldn't take you more than five minutes of setup per job.

Continue reading... 

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FaviconProBlogger Blog Tips

The Other Side Of ProBlogging: Making Real Money Right From The Start Of Your Blogging Career 20 May 2009, 7:01 am

In this post Ali Hale from the Office Diet shares some tips on how to make money from blogging by being a ‘Staff Blogger’. Learn more about Ali in the footer of this post.

You started a blog with the dream of making a living from writing about something you love. A month, or six months, or two years down the line, you’ve got a handful of subscribers, a few pennies accumulating in Google AdSense, and a growing sense of frustration. The gurus touted blogging as an “easy” way to make money: frankly, digging ditches is starting to look more appealing.

Even if you are willing to put in those early months of unpaid hard graft before you find an audience, you might just not have the time. In the current economy, you might need your blogging to start paying off now – not in two or three years.

I’ve got good news for you. Instead of struggling your way to an audience, you can start with a ready-made crowd of 50,000+ readers. Instead of watching those AdSense pennies trickle in, you can receive a fixed sum per post.

Staff Blogging – The Other Side Of ProBlogging

You might have noticed that ProBlogger has job boards. You might even have applied for a few jobs through them. This is just the tip of the iceberg of a blogging industry out there, where writers are hired and paid good money to write posts for large blogs.

If you love writing – and dislike the process of marketing, building traffic and doing techy things – you’ll find that staff blogging lets you have all the great bits of blogging without the tedious ones.

It’s not just about the money; it is also a lot of fun, especially if you enjoy writing and variety.

(Chris Garrett, ProBlogger: Secrets for Blogging Your Way to a Six Figure Income, p124)

So what exactly is staff blogging? It’s sometimes called “freelance blogging”, but bloggers often use that phrase to talk about traditional ProBlogging too – writing for themselves and making money through ads.

Staff blogging is writing regular posts for a blog (anything from several per day to one per month), and receiving a set fee per post.

Can You Really Make Money Like That?

Yes, you really can – and good money, at that. I’m paying my rent and bills purely from my staff blogging work, and I live in London in the UK – hardly the cheapest place in the world!

There are numerous blogs which pay writers a decent rate (I wouldn’t advise blogging for less than $20 per post, unless the posts are extremely short). Big names in the blogging industry advise high-powered bloggers to “outsource” the writing of content – and in many cases, the editing of the blog.

If you have cash to spare (err…invest) then paying for blog content is a great way to motivate people. If you are serious about building a blog network then you better be serious about rewarding your writers very well. (Yaro Starak, How To Grow A Great Blog Without Writing It Yourself)

How Do You Find Well-Paying Blogging Jobs?

Whenever I talk about staff blogging, this is what everyone wants to know: where are the well paid jobs, and how do you get them?

First, be proactive. Don’t sit around hoping that your dream job will appear on the ProBlogger boards: instead, look at the blogs which you read and see if any use multiple writers. If they do, there’s a good chance that they pay. Hunt around for pages like these:

Send a guest post to blogs which look promising, and mention that you’d be interested in becoming a regular, paid writer. Be a good guest blogger and don’t make careless mistakes that spoil your chances of success.

I’ve found all my best jobs through contacting editors personally in this way – not through trawling job boards. In a couple of cases, I didn’t even ask for a job: my guest post had landed in an editor’s inbox at just the right time, and I was offered a paid position:

I first met Ali Hale via a guest post submission. She sent an article to be published on Daily Writing Tips, and it was so good that I offered her the chance of becoming a paid staff writer on the blog. (Daniel Scocco, Daily Blog Tips Interview With Ali Hale)

Even if you’re applying speculatively, take the time to write a good email, to follow any guidelines (blogs may request guest posts or speculative posts in a certain format), and to behave as professionally as you would if you were applying to a blogging position listed on a jobs board.

Do I Need To Be A Great Writer?

One thing that worries a lot of potential staff bloggers is whether their writing is good enough. Of course, you need to have a good grasp of the English language – but you definitely don’t need to be the next Shakespeare. Blog readers want posts that are written in a clear, straightforward and engaging manner – and editors like to give their readers what they want!

Don’t try to use long, ponderous or difficult words in an attempt to impress. Sonia Simone calls this “fancy nancy” writing and warns against it on CopyBlogger, telling bloggers that instead they should just keep things simple and direct:

Write plainly and with vigor. Get your point across directly, with as much grace as you can muster. You can’t make a connection if your reader has no earthly idea what you’re talking about. (Sonia Simone, Are You a Fancy Nancy Writer, CopyBlogger)

If you do want to improve your writing style, these blogs are packed with tips and advice:

  • Daily Writing Tips (especially good if English isn’t your first language, or if you need to brush up on the basics)
  • CopyBlogger (which has a focus on blogging for marketing purposes, but lots of general advice too – good for intermediate and advanced writers)
  • Men With Pens (a mixture of writing and freelancing advice, much of it aimed at bloggers)

These two posts are particularly worth a look for some quick tips:

How Staff Blogging Can Help Traditional ProBloggers

Perhaps you don’t get a thrill just out of writing: you’re motivated by the idea of owning your own Technorati Top 100 blog, like Darren. You might have thought about writing for pay, but it seems like a waste of your time. You may even have been advised not to work for other people’s blogs, with warnings that staff bloggers work for

…a flat one-time fee with no residuals. If such bloggers stop writing, they stop earning. And apparently there’s no shortage of bloggers willing to work for such rates. (Steve Pavlina, How Much Is a Blog Post Worth? Would You Believe $2400 Each?)

Steve goes on to recommend that bloggers stick with writing on their own blogs, citing himself as an example of how this would be financially beneficial – he calculates that each post on his blog has brought in $2400. (This was in 2006, I imagine it’s considerably more by now.)

I’m going to have to disagree with Steve here. Most of us don’t have the writing and business talents that he does, and most of us aren’t anywhere near making $24/post on our own blogs, let alone $2400. Besides, getting some staff blogging experience is hugely beneficial for your own blogs. This could mean:

  1. Improved skills: The more you write for blogs, the better you’ll get at blogging. Writing for several different blogs gives you the chance to try out different styles and voices – this could help you to discover your blogging voice. And having your posts edited can teach you where you’re going wrong: writing for Dumb Little Man taught me to craft more engaging introductions to posts.
  2. Better discipline: Have you ever run out of ideas? Suffered from “blogger’s block”? Have you felt uninspired about your own blog, and lacked the motivation to write? Have you been “too busy” to blog? Getting a staff blogging gig will drive all your excuses away: when an editor’s expecting a post every week, you’ll find that you can write to a deadline.
  3. Traffic for your own blog: Some blogs which I’ve written for (Dumb Little Man is a good example) give me a short bio line as well as paying. This means I get great traffic and exposure.
  4. Google juice for your own blog: Most blogs that use staff writers will have a page listing those writers’ bios and linking to their sites. Since blogs that can afford to pay tend to be long-standing ones that rank well in Google, that link will improve your own Google ranking.

And, on top of that, staff blogging can give you some vital extra cash early on in your journey towards the blogging A-list. You can staff blog and write for your own blog as well: it’s not an either-or decision.

So what are you waiting for? Take a browse through some of the blogs that you love, look to see which have several regular writers, and shoot the editor a great guest post. Follow it up with a polite enquiry about getting paid to write for them, and you may well hit lucky…

Bio: Ali has been paying her rent and bills through staff blogging since September ‘08. She’s just released the “Staff Blogging Course” – a short, self-study ebook course packed with advice, tips and practical exercises and handouts. The course sells for $19, but ProBlogger readers can get a $5 discount by entering the code “ProBlogger” (no quotes, not case sensitive).

Post from: Blog Tips at ProBlogger.
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The Other Side Of ProBlogging: Making Real Money Right From The Start Of Your Blogging Career

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FaviconShoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

What People Trying To Make Money Online Blogging Don’t Get 17 May 2009, 3:35 am

Blogs work because its like word of mouth advertising. You have been reading someones blog and getting to know them. Then when they recommend something you are more likely to buy it. Just like when your friend tells you about this great deal they got on something.

It works so well affiliate marketers started making fake blogs (aka flogs) which make it look like someone is recommending a Google Money Tree system, or weight loss product or whatever. I am sure you have ran into a flog. The FTC is hot after them now though.

So my point really is that you cant just start up a blog and in a few months (even years) expect to earn the respect of your readers to start selling them products. You need to actually give value.. and do it consistently over time.

I am going into my 6th year of blogging and like many other bloggers who are considered “experts” I never intended to make money at it and actually didn’t until only a few years ago.

In 2009 this blog will make more money then I did in the first 30 years of my life (before running my own company full time) …. combined.

That’s kind of crazy!

But its a good time to be an authority in the “make money online” space. Even if I hate that association =P.

Do you use Facebook? Checkout http://www.facebook.com/shoemoney

This Post Is From ShoeMoney’s Internet Marketing Blog

What People Trying To Make Money Online Blogging Don’t Get

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FaviconRSSmeme

HOW TO: Publish Your Blog on the Amazon Kindle 14 May 2009, 12:00 am

http://www.rssmeme.com/story/11287560/how-to-publish-your-blog-on-the-amazon-kindle Shared 16 times. Tagged Amazon (1259) kindle (994) mashable (887) .

Kindle ImageThere are some interesting things you can do with a Kindle. One of them is the ability to subscribe to and read your favorite blogs on the go. In fact, this is how my mother reads my blog posts - via Mashable on the Kindle.

It’s an easy and on-the-go way to read your favorite blogs, but it was only available to a few high-profile web publications - at least, until today, when Amazon launched its Kindle Publishing for Blogs program. Now that you know about the program, your next question might be: how do I get my blog syndicated to thousands of Kindles?


Signing up for Kindle Publishing for Blogs



Kindle Blogs Image

So there are several caveats to starting with the new Kindle blog service. First thing: you have to create a separate account for the program. Your current Amazon or Kindle account isn’t enough. You need to input financial information, including your tax ID number and bank account information. You can sign up for the program if you’re not of the U.S., but there are several issues involved (explanations below).

Once you have a Kindle Publishing account, you just have to provide your blog’s RSS feed, a description, a screenshot, and more descriptive information and viola! Your blog’s content will soon be on the Kindle (after it passes Amazon’s approval process).


Receiving compensation


While your blog will be on a Kindle, you probably won’t make a whole lot of money. Let’s talk about numbers. First, you don’t get to choose pricing - Amazon does, based on what it believes is fair. This means $0.99 or $1.99 per month for most blogs. There is no way to distribute your blog for free, either.

Also important: you only get 30% of the subscription revenue. Thus if your blog goes for $0.99 cents and 1000 people subscribe to it via the Kindle, you’re not going to make $990, but rather $297. For major publishers, this is not a major source of income, but is better than nothing.

International publishers can only receive their funds via a U.S. check, which can come with significant fees to cash.


Blog distribution on the Kindle: is it worth it?



Mashable Kindle IMage

Here’s the truth: you’re not going to make a ton of money from the Kindle, at least for now. It’s a nice way to read blogs on-the-go, although images are black-and-white and video is non-existent. We don’t have numbers on how many people read blogs on the Kindle, but we bet it isn’t an astounding amount.

Yet the more methods distribution for your content, the better. We do hope that the Kindle gives content creators a bigger piece of the pie, though. This would make Kindle blog publishing a more viable option.

Oh, and a final reminder: you can get Mashable on your Kindle here.

Tags: amazon, Kindle

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FaviconTheme Lab

WordPress Weekend Resources - May 15, 2009 15 May 2009, 4:25 am

Another week, another set of weekend resources. Got some good ones this week.

How To: Use WordPress Conditional Tags to Hack Your Theme - This post by John Pratt over at WPHacks goes over, well, how to use WordPress conditional tags, as well as a number of ideas on what to use them for. For more info on this, check out this previous post I wrote here on WordPress conditional tags

Customize your 404 page from the WordPress admin - Okay, I admit it. The 404 pages of my free WordPress themes suck. This is a relatively simple (but useful) technique of widgetizing a theme’s 404 template. I’ll be using this method from now on, as it really is the perfect solution for dealing with 404 pages of public theme releases.

Using shortcodes to show members-only content - Justin Tadlock is on a roll with his WordPress tutorials. This is a pretty cool tutorial that teaches you how to use WordPress shortcodes to show members-only content, and provides all the code you’ll need.

Custom Fields Hacks For WordPress - This post by Jean-Baptiste Jung at Smashing Magazine has an awesome collection of WordPress custom field hacks. If you’ve ever wondered how to set an expiration time for posts, or display the music you’re listening to on a specific post, among other things, check it out.

20+ Tutorials and Resources for Working with Custom Fields in WordPress - For more custom field information, here’s another great collection of tutorials and resources relating to custom fields over at Vandelay Design. My Display Inline Ads With Custom Fields and WordPress was included too.

Wpazo - A brand new link blog brought to you by Ian Stewart (of ThemeShaper). It features links to the best WordPress ideas, plugins, themes, resources, and tutorials.

That’s it. If anyone knows of any other recently released WordPress resources, feel free to let me know in the comments.

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FaviconShoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

TwitThis Launches Suggested Twitter Users 13 May 2009, 8:23 am

A couple weeks ago I wrote about the fact that Twitter is now the 2nd biggest source of traffic to my blog behind Google.

Since that post, I have received a lot of questions from people asking me how I market myself or the blog on Twitter. The answer is, “I don’t.” What I do, however,  is make it easy for people to “retweet” my posts.

So how do I make it easier for people to retweet my posts? The first HUGE thing I did was implement TwitThis into my blog.  I forget how I originally heard about it, but I’m pretty sure it was from seeing other big blogs (like TechCrunch, Seth Godin, Mashable) and high profile sites (like MSN Video) use it. The list goes on forever.

After doing some research on TwitThis, I’ve realized it’s probably the biggest, baddest Twitter service that most people have never heard of… or at least don’t realize they have heard of it. Yahoo shows that it has over 6 MILLION backlinks and its root domain is a PR8.

I also noticed that on Google, it’s the first site after Twitter to rank for “Twitter”.

I was really intrigued by the fact that some people looking for a service just like TwitThis had never heard of it. So I tracked down the company’s founders to pick their brain.  It turns out they are super humble guys (totally opposite of me) and played down just how much it is used.  A quick search on Twitter shows that it’s used many times every minute.

So what is TwitThis? It’s basically a REALLY easy way for your users to retweet your blog posts.

Implementing TwitThis into your blog is so simple. They’ve got great plugins for WordPress and Blogger blogs, and I really like the Firefox bookmarker that let’s me just click and tweet the page I’m visiting.

This morning I just saw that TwitThis has launched a suggested users engine. Basically, the more you use the service - the more times you are suggested as a user other people should follow.

Sounds pretty hot! Being the site is used hundreds of thousands of times a day, it looks like a great way to connect with people. How do I know?

Well, I actually talked the people at TwitThis into letting me be a suggested user  a couple weeks ago. Sure enough - I picked up about 5k followers in a couple days during my Twitter contest. This is going to be pretty hot…

Here is the page on their site of how the suggested user system works:

Want To Be A TwitThis Suggested User?
Start Earning TwitPoints Today!

I want to be a suggested user. How do I earn TwitPoints?

* Submit a URL to TwitThis and earn 5 TwitPoints.
* Follow a suggested user and earn 10 TwitPoints.

How are my TwitPoints used?

* Each time someone follows you, it costs you 1 TwitPoint.
* Every 1000 times you are the suggested user, it costs you 1 TwitPoint.
* To keep the ecosystem fresh, users are taxed 10% of their TwitPoints daily.

How many TwitPoints do I need to be a suggested user?

* The more TwitPoints you have, the more times you will be a suggested user. For example, if you have 10% of the TwitThis economy’s credit system, then you’re the suggested follower 10% of the time.

Wow! So all you have to do is use the service. The more you use it, the more exposure your profile will get and the more followers you’ll start having. Sounds crazy easy.

Here is what the “Suggested User” looks like when you are about to submit a URL to TwitThis:

I gotta give it up the guys who made TwitThis.com - one of the very first Twitter services.  They have been at it since March of 2007 and have made steady improvements over the years.

What is the easiest way for you to use TwitThis and get more Twitter exposure?  Click the TwitThis button in any of my posts like hundreds of other people do every day. ;)

Awesome work guys.

Do you use Facebook? Checkout http://www.facebook.com/shoemoney

This Post Is From ShoeMoney’s Internet Marketing Blog

TwitThis Launches Suggested Twitter Users

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FaviconInside AdSense

What the Display Ad Builder means for publishers 12 May 2009, 11:09 am

We've been working to make it easier for advertisers to show display ads on the content network -- which benefits you, because it results in more budgets devoted to advertising on AdSense sites like yours. (As a reminder, "display ads" include all types of image-based ads, such as banners, rich media, and video ads.) In addition to recent launches such as DoubleClick Studio, third-party ad serving, and expandable rich media ads, we also launched the AdWords Display Ad Builder last October. This tool allows AdWords advertisers to create display ads using customizable templates and to target them to AdSense sites in a matter of minutes.

Since its launch, the Display Ad Builder has been extended to advertisers in over 100 countries and 40 languages. With over 90 customizable templates and thousands of active users of all sizes, the Display Ad Builder has quickly become what we believe is the largest platform for self-serve display ad creation on the web. Its usage varies from the largest digital agency, like Razorfish, to smaller advertisers like the Wilshire Grand Los Angeles. We'd like to take a few minutes to tell you more about the impact of this tool and how it can benefit you as a publisher:
  • More advertisers creating display ads: In just six months, the Display Ad Builder has significantly increased the number of AdWords advertisers using image-based ads. Many of these advertisers were already advertising with text ads on Google.com and AdSense sites, but have now found the visual elements, interactivity, and animations of display ads to be effective at increasing clicks, conversions, and overall ROI.

  • Higher quality, more relevant display ads for your site: With simplified display ad creation now available to advertisers of all sizes and industries, the display ads that show on your site are likely to be even more relevant to your content and audience. For sites with niche content or with an advertiser base that would be less likely to have the budgets to invest in display ad creation, this is especially true. The templates that we offer also vary well beyond simple static banners, including interactive rich media templates that allow users to scroll between or roll over multiple product images, in addition to multiple templates with animated text and images.

  • Higher potential earnings: As the reach of ads created with Display Ad Builder grows, we've seen encouraging results -- ads created with the Display Ad Builder have average click-through rates that outperform industry averages. We believe that this is due to the combination of advanced contextual targeting on AdSense, combined with templates that encourage best practices in effective display ad creation. We've also heard from many advertisers that they're finding improved cost per conversion efficiencies with the tool, meaning that more of their marketing budgets can be effectively deployed online, on your sites.
So what can you do to take advantage of the many newly created display ads? First, make sure that your ad units are opted into image ads. And, since many publishers are advertisers too, you may be interested in getting started with the Display Ad Builder yourself. To learn more, you can also view our series of how-to videos or read our feed of Display Ad Builder announcements.

Posted by Ryan Hayward - Display Ad Builder Product Marketing

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Faviconblogging: Frequently tagged products at Amazon.com

The New Rules of Marketing and PR: How to Use News Releases, Blogs, Podcasting, Viral Marketing and Online Media to Reach Buyers Directly (Paperback) tagged "blogging" 16 times 8 Jun 2009, 10:47 pm

The New Rules of Marketing and PR: How to Use News Releases, Blogs, Podcasting, Viral Marketing and Online Media to Reach Buyers Directly
The New Rules of Marketing and PR: How to Use News Releases, Blogs, Podcasting, Viral Marketing and Online Media to Reach Buyers Directly (Paperback)
By David Meerman Scott

Buy new: $11.53
60 used and new from $9.54
Customer Rating: 4.5

Customer tags: (24), (23), (22), (21), (19), (17), (16), (6), (6), (4), (4), (3)

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FaviconProBlogger Blog Tips

Interview with Blogs.mu founder James Farmer 11 May 2009, 1:04 pm

blogs.mu.pngEarlier today I posted about a fantastic new service by the name of Blogs.mu - a service that enables you to set up your own blog network. Now I’d like to post a quick interview with James Farmer - co founder of Incsub, the team behind Blogs.mu and the company that runs the WordPress MU hub WPMU DEV and the industry news blog WPMU.org. He’s also the founder of Edublogs.org. He (like me) is based in Melbourne, Australia.

He caught up with me over email last week to talk about Incsub’s brand new offering: Blogs.mu.

So what’s the difference between, say, Blogs.mu and WordPress.com?

jamesfarmer.jpg

Well, the main difference is that at Blogs.mu you become the blog provider, and you have a huge amount of flexibility and functionality that you just won’t get anywhere else.

It’s like WordPress.com in a box really, only better! Once you’re up and running you can create and host as many blogs as you want, at your own domain.

You’ve been able to do this for a while using WordPress MU but that’s been pretty hard as you need to setup hosting, run installation, download and configure themes and plugins etc.

Now though, we do that all for you… and you are free to grow your blog network or community in whatever niche you like – and, of course, run your own advertising!

It’s white label blog networks if you will… kinda like Ning.com for blogging.

So, you say users can run their own advertising, how does that work?

Blogs.mu Supporters (starting from 5 cents per blog per month) can run their own advertising across the entire network just by dropping in any ad code – it’s simple and very effective (or at least we like to think that!)

Every blog theme has 4 ad ‘spots’: under the post title and above the content, under the content and above the comments and at the top of each sidebar – as well as across a footer slot, for running JS contextual ads like Kontera or similar.

And you can set display rules for your ads too – like ‘only show them to IE browsers’ or ‘only show them to search engine visitors’ so you can make money like WordPress.com too… without annoying your users.

So what’s with the MU, are you big in Mauritius?

Heh, very funny, the MU actually stands for MultiUser - as in WordPress MU – also known as WPMU. We love the platform and have been on it from the start – one our WPMU Sites (Edublogs) is older than WordPress.com by 3 weeks… so we know what we’re doing.

And yeh, we did the obvious as well and setup WP.MU too – it’s an installation service for people who do want to get down and dirty with the guts of it all.

So we hope we’re covering every base!

And how do you think Problogger readers could best use Blogs.mu?

Well, I’m hoping there are a heap of ways that established and aspiring probloggers could use Blogs.mu. First up, if you’ve got an active community then this is a great way to get them writing in your space (you could even configure your site to a subdomain of your existing site!)

Another way would be that it’s a really affordable and powerful way to run your own 10 or so blog network.

Either way there are tons of advertising opportunities – and we’re looking into incorporating eCommerce, membership subscriptions, ‘pay to blog’ features and more pretty shortly.

Also, we’ve got some forums up and running for existing and prospective users (it’s completely free to join) at forums.blogs.mu so if any of your readers would like us to consider or build in specific features – we’d love to hear from them!

Check out Blogs.mu for yourself.

Post from: Blog Tips at ProBlogger.

Interview with Blogs.mu founder James Farmer

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110+ Massive Wordpress Video Tutorial Collection 6 May 2009, 7:19 am

title-wordpress-screencastOn this list You’ll find all available WordPress video tutorials on Internet with a lot of links for every level of knowledge. Video screencasts in my opinion teach You skills a lot faster than the best book You can find. In future You should check for updates on those sites, because WordPress is rapidly growing, but sites offering such great video screencasts stay and update.

Get Yourself busy and good luck, I really hope these links will help Your development process!

1. WP Screencasts Wordpress Video Tutorials

WP Screencasts is a collection of training videos for managing web based content using the WordPress publishing platform. The videos in this web site will help you learn how to use WordPress to publish blog posts and pages, edit existing content on your WordPress powered web site, moderate reader comments, and many more common tasks for site administrators and editors.

The primary target audience is blog authors and editors using WordPress to manage their web-based content.

wpscreencasts-wordpress-video-tutorial

WP 2.6 Screencasts

WP 2.6 Screencasts

Write post:

Manage posts, pages, links, categories, tags

Manage Comments

2. CSS-Tricks Wordpress Video Tutorials

Chris Coyier presents excellent three-part series which covers downloading and installing WordPress on a server all the way to a completed theme.

Also consider checking out Hodgepodge of Wordpress tricks with a lot of tips discovered and tips how to use WordPress as a CMS.

csstricks-wordpress-video-tutorial

3. iThemes Wordpress Video tutorials

Below are some video tutorials that cover general issues related to using WordPress and specific ones relating to how to tweak and use our individual theme series. You’ll find a lot of tutorials here, mostly basic, but I found several little advices useful for me too – You should check out these quality tutorials, around 50 tutorials available there.

ithemes-wordpress-video-tutorial

I featured iThemes latest tutorials about WP 2.7:

4. Siteground Wordpress Video Tutorials

These Sitepoint Wordpress tutorial series teach You how to get started with Wordpress and several skills You’ll need to protect and popularize Your site.

siteground-wordpress-video-tutorial

5. KillerSites Wordpress Video Tutorials

Also this site covers a lot of basic introduction video tutorials as well as creating Your own WP template, customizing and installing.

killersites-wordpress-video-tutorial

6. Likoma Wordpress Video Tutorials

The following help videos (screencasts with audio) will hopefully give you a better picture of what WordPress can do–and what you can do with WordPress. Very comprehensive and advanced video tutorial collection.

likoma-wordpress-video-tutorial

7. WordPress Training Video Tutorials

wordpresstraining-wordpress-video-tutorial

This is an index of the core WordPress training videos grouped by functional area. Most of the topics below include videos for versions 2.3.x and 2.5.x, more than 30 video tutorials available there.

Topics covered:

  • Blogging with WordPress
  • Configuring WordPress
  • Customizing WordPress
  • Installation and Upgrades
  • WordPress Administration

8. Vimeo Wordpress Tutorials

vimeo-wordpress-video-tutorial

9. Weblog Tools Videos Wordpress Tutorials

Huge collection of various WordPress tutorials, You should spend some time to research those videos, a lot of great stuff available there.

weblog-tools-collection-wordpress-tutorials

10. ScreenCastCentral WordPress Video Tutorials

14 beginner video tutorials covering wide range of knowledge necessary for WordPress beginners.

screencast-central-wordpress-video

11. Faq.WordPress.Com Screencasts

WordPress itself offer a huge collection of screencasts You can learn.

wordpress-faq-video-tutorials

12. Youtube Wordpress Video Tutorials

youtube-wordpress-video-tutorials

Other Tutorial Sites and Articles:

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WordCamp Toronto Raising the Bar This Weekend 7 May 2009, 1:50 pm


WordPress EventsOf all the WordCamp events to track, WordCamp Toronto this weekend, May 8-10, 2009, has been one of the most product and prolific. The Schedule is three very packed days of events, speakers, and…everything.

Starting at 8AM on Friday and closing Sunday afternoon with an awards ceremony, it’s going to be a packed weekend event – and I’ll be there to share in all the fun and adventure!

One of the exciting parts of the conference is the FlashPress event. FlashPress is a WordPress Plugin which integrates a WordPress PHP based CMS and Flash site. One Method and BackSpaceStudios teamed up for this open source project which will feature the rebuilding of the One Method site from the ground up with the FlashPress bundle. They will be documenting the process, code, and challenges along the way as participants lend a hand in the process.

There is plenty of social during this three day event, including the Opening Night Party at Lou Dogs on Friday, a popular southern barbecue and blues locale.

The Speakers list is amazing, featuring some of the best of the best in WordPress and blogging from around Canada and the world. Speakers include:

Oh, and me, .

WordCamp TorontoMembers of the local b5media team will also be speaking and in attendance, one of the popular blog networks built on WordPress.

The event will feature three tracks each day, with the third “track” being mostly social interaction and barcamp style unconference meetups. Everything from the technical aspects to the creative design elements, to writing styles and social media will be covered – with a lot of partying and coding in between.

I believe there are a few tickets left so hurry for this exciting WordPress adventure in Toronto, Canada.

Throughout the past few months, there have been t-shirt giveways and ticket contests and all kind of events and activity around the WordCamp event. I believe this is the second WordCamp in Toronto and they are truly setting a standard for WordCamps around the world. Raising the bar, they are!


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Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, member of the 9Rules Network, and author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won't Tell You About Blogging.

Posted in Blogging News, WordCamps, WordPress Events, WordPress News

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Ginny Redish — Letting Go of the Words (Podcast Interview at STC Summit) 5 May 2009, 7:58 pm

Download MP3 (to download, right-click and select Save Target As)
Length: 8 min.

Ginny Redish -- Letting Go of the Words

Ginny Redish -- Letting Go of the Words

Ginny Redish has just written a new book, Letting Go of the Words: Writing Web Content that Works. I had a chance to meet up with Ginny at the STC Summit and interviewed her briefly about her new book. Redish told me,  “Every use of your website is a conversation started by the site visitor.” Here’s an extended description:

People come to web sites for the content — for the information that answers their questions and lets them complete their tasks. In Letting Go of the Words, Ginny Redish provides easy-to-read guidelines with many full-color examples to help you plan, organize, write, and revise web content so that it is easy to find and easy to use.

You can buy the book here. It really is in full color with a lot of attractive diagrams and illustrations.

I haven’t read it yet, but the writing-as-conversation metaphor is appealing. The basic idea, I believe, is to anticipate the reader’s questions and then construct your writing as a response. This type of writing focuses you on your audience and gets you thinking about the specific questions, concerns, issues, and other problems your users might have. Each sentence you write should somehow answers those questions — you construct the conversation. Sounds like a brilliant technique, though I’ve never fully implemented it.

More Resources about Ginny Redish and Letting Go of the Words

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40 WordPress Optimisation tips 29 Apr 2009, 3:45 am

I presented on A4UExpo Europe yesterday on WordPress Optimisation, doing 40 tips in 40 minutes. Here are the slides:

This is a post from Joost de Valk's Yoast - Tweaking Websites. A good blog needs good hosting, you don't want your blog to be slow, or, even worse, down, do you? Use WestHost, and you'll never have issues again!

40 WordPress Optimisation tips

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For Those Who Still Don’t Get Twitter 5 May 2009, 4:00 am

Its been almost 1 year since the twitter name ShoeMoney was turned over to me and I started using it.

Its now the 2nd biggest source of referral traffic to my blog.

April Stats:

shoemoney twitter traffic

I know what most of you are thinking…. “Well if I had 30k followers I could get traffic too”  You would probably be surprised to learn that less then 5% of the twitter traffic came from my tweets.

Just engaging in the twittosphere has been amazingly rewarding.

But if you still “don’t get it” its cool. Less competition ;)

This Post Is From ShoeMoney’s Internet Marketing Blog

For Those Who Still Don’t Get Twitter

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