Category Archives: Feature

Big News: I am PicApp’s Community Manager

PicApp logoSo, for those of you that listened in to the WordPress Weekly podcast, you probably found out my big news: I am PicApp’s new Community Manager.

This means, for the first time in nearly three years, I will not be a full time blogger for a blog network, though my commitment to my own sites, and Grand Effect also remain strong. I am super excited to be part of the PicApp team.

PicApp is a newer servce, created to fill a need that PicScout realized the market currently had: lack of legal, high quality stock images being used in blogs. PicApp provides access to high quality editorial and creative images from some of the biggest stock photography suppliers in the world. With names like Getty and Corbis, you would expect to pay a high price if you wanted your blog to display such images, but PicApp gives them out freely, while protecting the original owners using an embed code, not unlike putting a YouTube video into your blog posts.

I will be working with bloggers, passing their thoughts, and opinions of PicApp back to the developers and product management team in hopes of creating the best image service possible for bloggers unable to afford the high cost of quality stock photography or the legal costs and issues that arise from copyright theft of images.

Pro Blog News has a great report on my career change, taken mostly from the WordPress Weekly Podcast.

Originally posted on May 5, 2008 @ 4:43 pm

Are Tags Dead?

When tags burst into the spotlight tags were hailed as the second coming of Jesus for the web. Flickr was using tags to organize photos, and del.cio.us to sort bookmarks. My first set of photos I uploaded on Flickr of the deviantArt summit were tagged pretty thoroughly, I loved the ability to see photos of similar content by clicking on the little globe, so I added as much detail as I thought was reasonable and likely to get results.

Blogs were on the tag bandwagon too, the demand for tags, was for a long time, outstripping the WordPress team’s ability or desire to add this functionality spurred plugins to do just that. I installed Christine Davis’ Ultimate Tag Warrior on every blog project I could until WordPress finally came out with built-in tag support, albeit very limited compared to what the community had created in the years prior.

There even grew Technorati tags out of the excitement, a once hailed blog search tool that used your articles tags to help categorize the results it returned. It was the age of the folksonomy revolution; collaborative tagging, pivot browsing, and social indexing were the hallmark of user driven content. Everyone and their mothers had tag clouds, hell they had tag cloud t-shirts.

But at some point they became passe, like the big hair and high tops of the 80’s the love for them seems to have faded. XFEP doesn’t make use of tags, and neither does bloggingtips which I write for as well. Yes, I still have a tag cloud on my own site, and add a minimal amount of tags to my posts and photos, out of habit. But do I regularly use tags anymore to find content? No.

There is hope though. Engadget is one site that does tagging right. Not just relegated as an aside to a post or footnote, but as useful aids within the content. Words that relate too or are the name of a tag are made into links to that tags archive. It’s useful, it’s simple, and it’s relevant. This is where tags can make a comeback.

Do you use tags on your blog? Why or why not? Let me know in the comments below.

Guest Author Bio: If you liked this post, please check out the writer, John Leschinski, someone who is both great at web design and a friend of mine. John Leschinski is a designer & consultant with almost a decade of experience, on the forefront of modern design, focused on creative opportunities and solutions for challenges facing businesses today.

Originally posted on May 6, 2008 @ 11:02 pm

Is The Make Money Blogging Bubble About to Burst?

The perfect storm is brewing in the Make Money Online blogging world. These blogs tend to elicit strong reactions for various reasons. It seems that most people tend to either love or hate them with very few being indifferent to them.

Whether you are an advocate or not, it is clear that as more of these blogs are sold, a very familiar trend is forming.

Raging Bull

My first taste of irrational exuberance was the raging stock market of the 90s. Ahh… those were the good old days, stock market mania was everywhere.

Maria Bartiromo was one of the most recognized faces in America, Alan Greenspan was a household name and Jim Cramer was a rockstar.

Obscure companies like Cisco, Lucent and Applied Materials rocketed to the tops of the stock market charts and made people millions of dollars.

Tech stocks were the gold standard and these things were selling for ridiculous multiples. It mattered not that they had no revenue, no receivables, no profit, no inventory, nothing.

People bought them because they kept going up, not because it made any sense. They were buying a dream.

Any idiot could make money picking stocks. This was GREAT!

Of course all good things come to an end and when common sense burst the the bubble, the paper millionaires came crashing back to reality.

Flip This House

The drug of choice in the 90s was the stock market. After “the crash” people wanted a safer drug, one that wasn’t so volatile and that they understood more about.

Low interest rates and ridiculous lending practices began to skyrocket the housing market and people looking for the next big thing had just found it.

Those who didn’t even know what Applied Materials made, felt much better about investing in something they know, housing.

Houses began to appreciate 10, 20, 50 even 100 percent a year in many cases. Homeowners were cashing out and indulging in a lifestyle that they never dreamed possible.

Maria Bartiromo was replaced with Ty Pennington and Page Davis. Flip this House and Trading Spaces became two of the most popular shows on network TV.

Viewers eagerly tuned in to watch the latest moron buy a fixer upper, screw everything up beyond belief, yet still sell for a 6 figure profit. If that boob could make all of those mistakes and still profit, then so could I?

Any idiot can make money flipping houses. This is GREAT!

Just as the stock market of the 90s did before it, the Real Estate market has come crashing to earth. The guy who stumbled and bumbled his way to a 100k dollar profit before, was now stuck with the house and soon to be bankrupt.

Irrational Exuberance

Roughly a year ago a similar trend started in the world of blogging. It seems that MMO blogs are the latest “next big thing.”

John Chow and his outrageous income reports fuel the fire every month as bloggers see how easy it is to make money blogging.

Every time John Chow posts an income report it reminds me of those people who were able to make thousands on a flip without even knowing how to use a hammer.

Any idiot can Make Money Blogging. This is Great!

Uh oh.

Flip My Blog

This latest flip my blog craze is still unfolding even as I write this post. It seemed to start last year when when Blogging Fingers was sold. The floodgates were open and a number of blogs have been sold since that event.

Names like Cashquests, Onemansgoal, Blogtrepreneur, OneMansGoal again, Blogging Experiment, One Mans Goal yet again, SEONoobs, Shylock Blogging and the list goes on.

The previous two bubbles that I mentioned all had signs of “irrational exuberance” that foretold the end of the craze and this one is no different.

OneMansGoal has sold 3 times in the last 6 months with the latest being to a rank newbie who knows little to nothing about WordPress and is an admittedly poor writer. The selling price over 10k dollars!

Simply learning to blog is hard enough but learning to make money blogging at the same time is harder still. It appears he spent 10k dollars hoping to accelerate his learning curve but reality is that he bought the car before learning how to drive.

SEONoobs might be an even better example. This blog sold for $4500 dollars despite being only a few weeks old. You could duplicate that blog for almost no money and a couple of weeks worth of writing.

Conclusion

Nobody can accurately predict where the MMO blog craze is heading or how much money will change hands before we see that bubble burst, but I don’t think anyone will argue that a bit of irrational exuberance might be in play already.

I listed the two examples above but the bar for ridiculous might reach a new high any minute. John Cow has his parody blog on Sitepoint with a Buy It Now price of 50k dollars!

Cow reports an income of about 3500 dollars per month, so in the unlikely event that the buyer is able to maintain that revenue, it will be more than a year before they even break even.

Much like the “flipper” who ended up being stuck with a house that wasn’t worth what he paid for it, will this end up being the case for some or all of these blogs.

Time will tell and maybe they will prove my theory wrong, but all of the signs of a bubble are there. Much like the past, dreamers will blindly plunge into a field they know nothing about hoping they can be the next big thing.

The bottom line is it’s their money, if they want to plunge their life savings into a dream then so be it, but I expect that they will quickly learn that Hoping makes for a very poor business plan.

If you enjoyed this post you can find many more on my own blog at The Blog Entrepreneur. You will find me here every Friday as long as David doesn’t sell after reading this article.

Originally posted on April 18, 2008 @ 5:00 am

7 Tips To Overcome Writers Block

7 Tips to Overcome Writers Block

Have you ever sat down at the keyboard needing to write a post only to draw a total blank? The longer you sit there and try to force the content to flow, the harder it becomes to concentrate? It’s kind of like trying to go to the bathroom when you know someone is listening, no matter how hard you try…well, you get the idea.

Don’t fret, you are definitely not alone if you occasionally struggle to generate unique content. It is not difficult to find examples of daily as posts get recycled into new content and bloggers try to make something out of used up older posts.

Recognizing the problem is the easy part, what to do about it is the what most bloggers struggle to figure out. If your creative juice has slowed to a trickle then keep on reading because we’ve got the fix to get your content flowing again.

Here’s 7 different suggestions for posts that you can resort to when your creativity needs a recharge.

Caution: Use Only In Emergency

  • In case of emergency break glassProduct Review – Granted these sometimes are not the most exciting posts to write or read but if you give an in depth review of something you feel strongly about then you are sure to add value to the content. It could be something from your favorite plugin to the last book you read but whatever you do, make it entertaining to read.
  • List Posts – List posts are some of the most popular and widely read posts that you can find on the Internet. People absolutely LOVE them. I would challenge you that if you are going to resort to a list post that you make sure you put a spin on it that will entertain and be unique.
  • Round Up – Round Up posts are typically a summary of some of the favorite posts you’ve read this week either from your own blog, other blogs or a combination of the two. I recently wrote a White Trash Round Up post about some recent controversy in the MMO niche. It’s not your typical roundup post but, duh, that’s what makes it unique.
  • Rant Post – Everyone loves some good drama. They might pretend they are above it but no question, a rant or a slam post will create traffic. Reality TV is popular because people love the drama it provides. If you check out some of the posts I linked to in the White Trash Round Up post then you can tell by the comments that people LOVE these. Crank on someone today.
  • Post a Poll – Ask for input. Problogger constantly posts polls on his site and asks his readers for input. He then is able to generate a number of posts based off the results of the poll. This can be a built in content generating machine. Genius.
  • Link Love – Bloggers LOVE being linked to, so make someone’s day and link out to some of your favorite bloggers. You can introduce your readers to some great content make someone’s day all at the same time. If you believe in paying it forward, then this is an easy way to do it.
  • Don’t Post a Damn Thing Post – Yep, sometimes you are just better off not to post anything than to try and force it. A favorite saying of mine comes to mind….“It is better to be thought of a fool, than to open one’s mouth and remove all doubt.”

If you can’t find something to write about after reading this list then don’t fret, it won’t hurt to take a day or two off from posting and recharge your batteries. You will be better off for it as long as you don’t let the day or two slide into a week or more.

The lure of taking a day or two off can be attractive so as long as you don’t let it become a habit then your traffic and subscribers shouldn’t suffer too much. Whatever you do, don’t be like John Cow, and take a vacation only to come back and decide to sell your blog.

I came up with 7 ideas…..who can come up with another one?

125tbe-test.gifIf you enjoyed this post then will find me back here every Friday until the boss kicks me out. In the meantime you can check me out on my own blog at The Blog Entrepreneur if you just can’t wait until then. You can read my latest post “Buying a Blog is Like Buying a Mail Order Bride.”

Enjoy.

Originally posted on April 25, 2008 @ 8:00 am

Should You Start a New Blog, or Something Else?

Kevin Muldoon has asked on his blog, System0 if his next project should be a blog, and while I am a full time blogger, and big fan of all things blogging, but I am leaning more towards “no”. Before you all lynch mob me, let me explain myself.

In the last three years, I have witnessed many bloggers make big bucks online, but, to me, what is even more apparent is that services can actually be easier to monetize and grow much larger than most blogs will ever strive to.

When working with Bloggy Network, a fair bit of the revenue generated was from services (though even more was spent on its constant development due to Ahmed’s quest for perfection).

You develop something, grow your user base, and monetize it. Once developed, the content added to Blog Flux was generated more by users than by the owners, and unlike paying bloggers to write for you, most of the content is generated freely. They add their sites to the services, and talk on the forums, all the while building up a service site that someone else gets to make money from.

With blogs, it is a hard, long road to real monetization through content development. Sure, there are the “over night successes”, but I see just as many, if not more, from the online services world.

If Kevin had asked me this question three years ago, I probably would have told him wholeheartedly to add new blogs, as it was a slightly newer market then, but with the fierce competition today, and the growing difficultly to stand out in the crowd, growing a blog from nothing into something large enough to make money versus just losing money is one of the hardest things you can do online.

Yes, I know this flies in the face of my own efforts as I continue to launch a few blogs here and there, but that is mostly due to the start up costs associated with each type of site. Starting a blog is cheap, while building an easy to use, effective service is expensive, and I just don’t have the capital to put such a site up right now.

Also, considering the niches that Kevin wants to get into is Tech and Humour, I really wouldn’t suggest starting up “just another blog” at this point, not unless he has an amazing hook for each site that will quickly separate them from the millions of others he would be competing against.

Now for another caveat, stay away from turnkey sites. Those are sites built on mass produced scripts where the only differentiating factor is the owner and the domain. Building your own idea, and capitalizing on its uniqueness, no matter how small, is the better business approach in my mind.

Originally posted on April 17, 2008 @ 1:45 pm