From the monthly archives:

August 2009

Google Still No. 1 Search Engine On Earth; Search Activity Way Up, comScore Says

by Matt McGee on August 31, 2009

Search activity around the world jumped 41 percent between July 2008 and July 2009, and Google remains the most popular search engine with 67.5% global market share. Those are some of the stats that comScore shared today about the global search market. According to comScore, Google is not only No. 1 around the world, but it [...]

....


{ 0 comments }

Danny Sullivan’s Preview Of Search Engine Land’s SMX East 2009 Search Marketing Conference In New York

by Danny Sullivan on August 31, 2009

In five weeks, our SMX East search marketing conference arrives in New York City from Oct. 5-7. The show features four to five tracks of sessions spread across three days and covers all aspects of search marketing. Below is a personal tour from me on what attendees can expect. Our SMX Advanced [...]

....


{ 0 comments }

Gulli Leaves Ask.com For Microsoft Bing, Finally Has “Resources”

by Barry Schwartz on August 31, 2009

Ten days ago, we reported that Antonio Gulli left Ask.com after 4 years heading up their technology team in the European R&D center. Gulli announced his new plans are to continue in search, but switch ships and work for Microsoft Bing. Gulli said he will be “leading all the engineering development for UX and verticals [...]

....


{ 0 comments }

SMX East Rate Increases Sept 12 – Register Today & Save

by Search Engine Land on August 31, 2009

Register now for Search Marketing Expo – SMX East and you’ll save $150. You have until the end of the day Friday, September 11 to take advantage our early bird rate. 50+ conference sessions for all experience levels on SEO, PPC, social media, local search and more. Check out the agenda. New to search engine marketing? [...]

....


{ 0 comments }

The Myth of ‘Great Content’ Marketing Itself

by Darren Rowse on August 31, 2009

One of the common misconceptions that some new bloggers start out with is that in order to find readers for their blog all they’ll have to do is regularly write quality content.

  • “Great content will market itself” - a statement I heard one speaker make at a blogging conference last year.
  • “Write it and they will come” - a motto I’ve heard a number of new bloggers sharing as a secret to their yet to be found success.
  • “Quality Content = Readers” - an ‘equation’ I saw being written about in one online blogging course recently

Each of the above statements has elements of truth to it. Many bloggers have built successful blogs on the back of great content. However there are almost always other factors at play.

The reality is that many blogs produce quality content that doesn’t get read. The reason isn’t that the blog’s not worth reading - but in many cases it’s because nobody knows to go read it.

Here’s the thing…..

Letting your content market itself DOES work IF you already have an audience to help with that process by spreading word of it through word of mouth - but if you’re just starting out and don’t yet have a readership the reality is that YOU are the only person who knows your great content exists.

Word of mouth can still play a part in your finding of readers - but as YOU are the only person that knows about your great content YOU need to be the one who starts the process and starts the process of getting the word out.

It’s time to hustle and get word out about your content.

Seeding Content

Tomorrow I want to highlight 9 methods to do this - however today I want to start with a more general suggestion that comes from my own experience of getting content read

Seed it - Don’t Force it!

Perhaps it’s just my personality or style - but I find that sometimes less is more in the blog post promotion game. Here’s how I’d chart the effectiveness of my blog promotions vs the amount of effort (or aggressiveness might be a better word) put into the promotion.

promotion-effectiveness-effort.png

Let me flesh this out a little:

  • In my experience if you only put little effort into your blog promotion you get little results. This is what I talk about above - if you don’t let people know about your posts how will anyone find them?
  • If you put in too much effort into it and get too aggressive with your promotion you can also get little results. In fact sometimes when you’re too aggressive you can actually go backwards and hurt your site.
  • For me it’s about putting in some effort - but not getting too full on about it. It’s a real balancing act at times.

I like the term ’seeding’ to describe how I try to promote my content.

I’m not really a great gardener but I do know that in order for me to have a new plant grow in my garden I need to go to some effort - but that if I do too much I can actually hurt the growth of the plant.

To have a plant grow I need to plant a seed, I need to ensure it gets water, I can give it some fertilizer, I need to give it a little protection from my kids digging it up…. but after that it’s up to the seed and the environment to make it grow. It takes some effort - but there comes a point where I need to step back and let the seed do it’s thing.

This is similar to my experience of promoting content on blogs. Often it takes me getting the ball rolling but if I force things it can actually have the reverse effect.

As I look back on some of the biggest traffic events on my blogs there’s been a real mix of my own promotion (usually to start the process) and a more organic thing happening. Sometimes I push too hard and don’t get results - other times I don’t push enough and get little return also - however getting it right can lead to incredible days of traffic.

Tomorrow I want to continue this train of thought and give you 9 practical examples of how to ’seed’ content.

Post from: Blog Tips at ProBlogger.
468x60.jpg

The Myth of ‘Great Content’ Marketing Itself

{ 0 comments }