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The Guest Posting System

As many of you already know, guest posting is a great way to promote your sites. No site can live on an island and the more links you can get from other sites, the better.

The biggest problem with guest posting has always been the difficulty of getting a post onto other sites. You have always had to email the blogger who owns the site, talk about ideas for a guest post, get the thumbs up, and then proceed to write a post that’s good enough to get published on their blog. This isn’t an easy process and for that reason, most people never get around to it.

I’ve done a lot of guest posting the hard way and can tell you that it’s definitely worthwhile. However, I can also tell you that getting a post up on a site will take a lot of work and time. Even though it’s useful for bloggers and site owners to get free content, it can be difficult to establish the connections that make guest posting actually happen.

Introducing The Guest Posting System

Mark and I have been thinking for quite some time about how we can make it easier to connect with site owners and bloggers who want to receive guest posts.

With that in mind, we created an interface that allows site owners to locate sites that are willing to accept guest posts and also allows them to write the guest post and submit it to the blog of their choice, all from one location. So far more than 700 blogs have been added to this system. These blogs are organized according to categories to make it easier for people who are looking for blogs to post on.

Though we are going to eventually offer access to this service as a stand-alone product (it isn’t going to be free), the members of our program can already use it. So far the results that people have been getting are amazing. People have REALLY been liking it.

Receiving Guest Posts

Those who would like to receive guest posts from other site owners can install a simple plugin that hooks them into the system. Once they have installed the plugin, their blog will be included in the list of sites that show in the interface. When people submit guest posts to their site, those posts will show up as drafts in their WordPress admin. Currently the interface is only set up to send content to WordPress blogs.

To protect the blogs that actually publish the content, we have set up some security measures. Before a post is sent to a blog, we check it for duplicate content both inside our network and in Google’s index. This prevents spammers from being able to use the tool. Only original content can be used in the system. On top of that, the blogger has complete control over what is actually published on their site. They can reject any article that doesn’t meet their quality requirements. If an article is rejected, it simple goes back to the person who submitted it. They can submit the article to another blog or they can edit and resubmit.

Rules For Using The Guest Posting System

1. Only posts that are 300+ words can be submitted using the system.
2. Two links are allowed within posts.
3. Duplicate content is not allowed.
4. Spun content is not allowed.
5. Bloggers who receive guest posts can reject at their own discretion. Those who submitted these posts can of course submit them to another blog or they can edit them and resubmit.

Read more about the GPS here.

from Court’s Internet Marketing School

Words That Work by Frank Luntz

Words That Work by Frank Luntz is one of my favorite business books.

You may know Frank Luntz from TV appearances around election time. He has a dial system that reflects how voters react to the words of political candidates.

Frank Luntz has also worked with dozens of Fortune 500 companies to fine tune the use of words in their messaging.

The subtitle of Words That Work really says it all: “It’s Not What You Say, It’s What People Hear”.

The book is excellent for anybody in the business of communicating. As a marketer, the case studies and tips are priceless.

In the first chapter, Frank Luntz the ten rules of successful communication (the book goes into detail on each of these rules):

  1. Simplicity: Use Small Words
  2. Brevity: Use Short Sentences
  3. Credibility is As Important As Philosophy
  4. Consistency Matters
  5. Novelty: Offer Something New
  6. Sound and Texture Matter
  7. Speak Aspirationally
  8. Visualize
  9. Ask a Question
  10. Provide Context and Explain Relevance

Anyhow, I’d highly recommend Words That Work as a great primer on using words that have the most impact, whether it be to customers or colleagues.

Video: Words That Work by Frank Luntz

This post originally appeared on the Affiliate Marketing Blog by Shawn Collins

Read and comment on Words That Work by Frank Luntz

Disclosure policy for the Affiliate Marketing Blog.


from Affiliate Marketing Blog by Shawn Collins

Mecom forecasts 35 per cent digital revenue growth

The chief executive of the European newspaper publisher Mecom, David Montgomery, has announced plans to increase its digital revenue by €100m (£90m) over the next three years.

Despite an 11 per cent fall of digital revenue in 2009, to €67m, Montgomery believes that the company's target is achievable. He pointed out that turnover of Mecom's online news newspaper websites had increased by 5 per cent in 2009 and that web traffic had increased by 31 per cent over the same period. The revenue decrease was down to various standalone sites, he explained, including recruitment and classified advertising, that had been hard hit by the recession.

Mecom owns 30 newspapers and operates 200 websites across Norway, Denmark, Poland and the Netherlands.

Montgomery said that they plan the digital growth to come from advertising and various paid-content products, rather than paywalls.

"We are not contemplating direct paywalls. We see standalone [paid-for] products [working] only for highly specialised or unique content. Online newspaper revenue has continued to grow and we have started 2010 strongly," he said.

This article was brought to you by Newsvend – delivering online news, blogs and other unique content.

from MoreNiche Affiliate Marketing Blog

Free EncryptStick Webinar

All successful sales professionals know that you can’t effectively sell a product if you don’t understand it. We’d like to give you the opportunity to learn how EncryptStick works, and how to best sell the product to your customers through a free webinar. We strongly urge you to participate, as we’ll give you all the tools/strategies that you’ll need to successfully market EncryptStick and most importantly make money through our affiliate program.

WEBINAR DETAILS:

Round 1
Sun, Mar 21, 2010 6:00 PM – 7:00 PM EDT
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/260771162

Round 2
Tue, Mar 23, 2010 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM EDT
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/447483778

RSVP required. Use the contact forms through the links above, or email me and I’ll send you login information.

AGENDA:

Introduction of panelists [2 min]
Tyrone Phipps. CEO Onix International

Review the agenda for the webinar [1 min]
Tyrone Phipps. CEO Onix International

Explain the format of the webinar [2 min]
Tyrone Phipps. CEO Onix International

Demonstration of EncryptStick application [20 min]
Tyrone Phipps. CEO Onix International

Benefits of EncryptStick from a Security Perspective [5 min]
Mark Smail, CTO Onix International

Question and Answers [10 min]
Everyone in attendance

Final comments [2 min]
Tyrone Phipps. CEO Onix International

ABOUT THE FORMAT:

This presentation will be run via an interactive website using a webinar format [i.e. web plus seminar]. You can participate from the comfort of your own home, plus there’ll be lots of chances for you to ask questions throughout the event.

WHAT YOU NEED TO JOIN IN:

1. Computer connected to the internet.
2. Headphones or speakers to listen to the presentation.
3. Microphone to ask questions [optional - you can also ask questions using text based chat].

BONUS:

As a bonus, attendees will receive a free license to EncryptStick [a $39.99 value].

Please get in touch with any questions/comments/feedback; I’m looking forward to speaking with you at one of the webinars!

Have a great day!

from Affiliate Marketing Blog by AMWSO

Links for 2010-03-15 [del.icio.us]

Source: Aviemore Business Blog


from Aviemore Business Blog

The SXSW Keynote With Ev Williams You Had Hoped to See

This afternoon, as most of you know, Ev Williams, CEO of Twitter sat down for a much-anticipated and heavily-attended keynote interview at the South By Southwest conference in Austin. After thousands of Twittering geeks and quasi-geeks alike had settled in to the packed exhibition hall and overflow rooms to hear the latest updates delivered straight from Twitter’s leader, their excitement soon turned to boredom and finally, severe annoyance, as the interview’s pace, tone and content fell well below expectations. After an hour’s time, the halls in Austin were more than half empty, and an opportunity to showcase one of technology’s biggest successes in the last few decades was for the most part lost.

For a huge number of attendees at SXSW, Twitter epitomizes a new form of communication. Their friends are on it. It’s where they chronicle their lives and connect with like-minded people and businesses. That the keynote was the draw of the week would be a dramatic understatement. As I sat upstairs in the Austin Convention Center, letting my laptop get some electricity in anticipation of live-blogging the keynote, the escalators jammed with hopeful starry-eyed nerds awaiting a visit from their blue-tinged oracle.

I have met Ev twice myself, including quickly Sunday night at the Google Reader/Blogger party, exchanging a few pleasantries and shaking hands, but by no means consider us close. That said, I expect I will see him again, while for many of those attending today’s event, this could be their first and maybe only time to hear Ev’s words directly. He doesn’t do major speaking opportunities often, and SXSW is one of the biggest geek meccas of the year. Even if it was not an opportunity to announce something amazing, both Ev and the interviewer would have a huge platform to talk to the audience and be interesting. And they failed. Ev may not be the charismatic leader in the image of Steve Jobs, but he really had no chance, being served a syrupy mosaic of cotton-ball soft questions that dealt with feeling, culture and “awesomeness.”

As I summarized the keynote in a running transcript on Google Buzz, I hoped my own fatigue wasn’t seeping through the text, but the pedantic non-inquisitive approach had me fidgety, featuring insightful questions such as:

“It was you or Biz that said if it was awesome people would use it, and when you talk about creating something, it is about awesomeness? What is awesomeness for you guys?”

At other points, I wrote… (Questioner keeps agreeing with Ev and saying that’s “cool” rather than asking questions) and (Questioner recaps his own previous blog posts)…. When I looked up at the conclusion of the keynote, the once-packed overflow room I was in was tired, quiet, and very empty. The row I was sitting in, once packed elbow to elbow, sported five empty chairs to my left, and a pair of folks to my right with a few empty chairs in between. The talk had clearly missed the objective, and people were sorely disappointed, compared to what they had obviously hoped would be something special.

Here’s what should have happened.

For me, the keynote speech fell far short, not because the questioner was friendly, but because there was very little substance. One can question a speaker in an interesting way without being contentious. What failed to happen was any detailed questioning into competitive markets, technology, challenges or relations with developers. Instead, we got questions about management principles, overly long descriptions of Wal-Mart, ambition, whether partnerships should be “win-win”, or if Twitter could be a force for good.

I respect Ev and think he had hoped for a lot more. I would have challenged him and asked:

  1. Has Twitter finally escaped the scalability problems that plagued the service in 2008? If not, what’s left to solve, and what kind of technical challenges remain?

  2. There was talk that Facebook once was interested in purchasing Twitter, and you chose to remain independent. How do you see Twitter’s role in a world alongside Facebook? Where do you compete and where could you potentially partner? How did their acquisition of FriendFeed change things?
  3. When you saw the launch of Google Buzz, did you feel like the old company you once worked for was looking to stab you in the back?
  4. You talked about being an open company hoping to foster strong developer relations. How can developers on the Twitter platform be sure advances in your own services won’t compete with them and put them out of business?
  5. While you have opened up the firehose to select partners for revenue, can anybody who wants to pay gain access to the firehose feed? If not, how do you set the criteria for doing business?
  6. There are many different Twitter clients out there. What are aspects of third-party clients which you like the most? What attributes of these clients can we expect to see in Twitter.com?
  7. The Twitter search engine still is extremely broken and only returns a few days worth of tweets. Will this ever be solved, and how big of a priority is it for your team? What is left to do and how soon can we see the true search engine come online?
  8. The company has recently reversed its approach to a Suggested User List, but as you know, many people on Twitter have followings in six or seven figures that benefited from the old model, and have incredible reach or influence because of that approach. How can the playing field be leveled?
  9. It is assumed that your relationship with Betaworks has also led to your use of Bit.ly as the primary URL shortener on the service. How soon until you purchase Bit.ly outright? Should we also assume closer relationships with other Betaworks companies, such as TweetDeck?
  10. So far, it appears you are avoiding revenue models that include advertising in the stream, similar to Google AdSense, but we have also been promised advertising we will love. Can you explain how this advertising will work, and if I can block it?

To sit down with the CEO of one of the most interesting companies in all of technology and not talk about technology or competition or specific tools in any meaningful way was a dramatic letdown. That the interviewer did not recognize the fatigue of the audience as they scurried out of the cavernous halls was shocking, and now, Ev, who seems to be more on the shy side than the screaming and yelling type, like Steve Ballmer, may think twice about another opportunity, which is unfortunate.I recognize a public interview on such a stage can be a real challenge. We all learned about Sarah Lacy’s struggles in that space back in 2007. But those of us who use Twitter and really care about these products deserved more. The SXSW community deserved more. They voted with their feet and they voted with their retweets. While one can remain civil and not throw barbs at the speakers, there was no question this could have gone a lot better than it did, and Twitter will have to promote its new @ Anywhere platform in a better way, for today, it was seriously overshadowed by a train wreck we found ourselves stuck watching.

More: louisgray.com | RSS | Buzz | E-mail | Cell: 408 646.2759


from louisgray.com

Why Choose Affiliate Marketing Online?

Affiliate Marketing seems to be the way to go when it comes to making money online. It’s not as complicated and demanding as some other online businesses might be.
from Internet and Businesses Online: Affiliate Revenue Articles from EzineArticles.com

Things That Used to be Good but Now Suck

Growing up in the 80’s, I was a avid collector of baseball cards.  Since the Oakland A’s were my team, my favorite players were the Bash Brothers, Mark McGwire and Jose Canseco.  As the two players achieved early success, I had foolish dreams that my Canseco and McGwire rookie cards would eventually be worth tens of thousands of dollars.  Fast forward twenty plus years and a couple of steroid scandals and I would be lucky to get $100 for both of their cards.

As a result, my McGwire and Canseco rookie cards are a good example of something that used to be good, but now sucks.  Here are a couple of more examples:

1. Cracker Jack Prizes–You used to be able to at least get some kind of cheap plastic ring or top.  Now all you get is a cheap piece of paper or sticker.  They are so lame that I don’t even open the prize anymore.

2.  American Idol–Who knew that the one of the main reasons most people watched the show was to  see what kind of medication Paula Abdul took that day and how it would affect her???

3.  The New York Knicks–After making the playoffs for 14 straight years from 1988-2001, the Knicks have not won a playoff game since 2001 and haven’t even made the playoffs since 2004.

4.  Toyotas–Do I really have to explain?

5.  Lindsay Lohan–This childhood Disney star showed us her talent in movies like The Parent Trap, Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, and Mean Girls.  Now she is best known for making terrible movies like I Know Who Killed Me, forgetting to wear proper undergarments, and for suing E*Trade.

6.  Myspace–Once “The Place” to be on the internet, now Myspace is now just a glittery back ground graveyard that auto plays the popular music of 2003.

7.  Scrambled Adult Channels–A long time ago (okay about 20 years ago), the adult channels came in scrambled unless you subscribed to them.  Unfortunately for me, my parents did not subscribe to these channels so I had to resort to watching the scrambled version to see what was going on.  Fortunately for me, sometimes the scrambling was not that great and I could see (and hear) what was happening.

Now, in this internet age, millions of boys going through puberty will never enjoy this rite of passage.  Instead, they are exposed to hard core pornography every day.  Yes, those parental controls that you put on your computer can be easily bypassed by your tech-savvy seven year old. :)

8.  AOL Instant Messenger–This weird yellow guy was on every computer in the United States a couple of years ago.  Now only preteen girls and pedophiles seem to use this service.

9.  Tiger Wood’s Publicist’s Job–This quickly went from the easiest job in America to a candidate for an episode of Dirty Jobs

10.  Saturday Morning Television–Even though I have never been a morning person, I used to at least try to wake up early on Saturday mornings to watch all the good cartoons.  These days, you are more likely to see an infomercial on a Saturday morning than some Looney Tunes.

Can you think of any other things that used to be good and now just suck? Leave a comment to let me know.

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from The Red Stapler Chronicles

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