Posts Tagged ‘Business blogging’

Best Posts about Blogging – July 2008

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

July brought with it many great posts to help new bloggers blog well.

Here are my favorites, broken down by category – please enjoy!

Attracting Visitors To Your Blog

21 Ways To Make Your Blog or Website Sticky

A sticky website is one where a first time reader arrives and finds it difficult to leave – not because you hijack them and make them stay, but because you’ve created a place they want to get to know better. Darren describes what’s worked for him and encourages you to do the same.

How To Kill Conversation and Suck the Life Out Of Your Blog

New bloggers, sometimes even seasoned bloggers, make daily decisions that result in either the growth of their community or its demise. If your visitors are not coming back, or not interacting with you, you might want to reconsider your commenting policy.

12 Common Blogging Mistakes to Avoid

Jeff walks us through the most common reasons why blogs fail, and shows you how to avoid them. In this post he talks about the importance of having bite sized, scannable content, the problems with advertising within blog posts, how to establish trust and credibility, the importance of images, and much more.

5 Ways To Increase Comments On Your Blog

You want your blog to be successful? You’ve got to interact with your visitors. But what if people aren’t commenting? Here, David highlights the five most successful methods for increasing comments on your blog.

3 Types of Blogs That Totally Suck

“Anchor text spam”, “Trick me into clicking,” and “You mean I need to know how to write to be a blogger,” are three types of blogs that suck according to Jill. In this post she describes each and encourages you to look at your blog with fresh eyes.

Make your blog findable by search engines

Top Ten Fatal URL Design Mistakes

A bad URL means your blog/post won’t be found, clicked, visited and linked, or submitted to social media. Without proper URLs, most of your other great web design, usability and SEO measures get wasted. This is not about your domain name; you need to understand slugs too; Tad explains them.

How To Get Google To Love You

Two things you need to consider when thinking about how Google sees your blog; on page factors, and off page factors. In this post, Ken walks you through the importance of considering the elements that make up each factor.

via: The SEO Company

Online SEO Tools – The Ultimate Collection

Ann offers over 60 free online tools to help you optimize or analyze your site. Includes sections on; backlink analysis, keyword research, domain name tools, on site analysis and diagnosis, and website traffic and demographic resources. Bookmark this post!

How To Get New Sites To Rank Quickly

The main difference between a low ranked site and a top ranked site is often site age. But what if you’re a new site that has to compete with sites that have been around for a few years? Aaron gives you seven strategies explaining what you need to do to rank quickly.

How do you know you got a Google PageRank update?

This post walks you through the basics of PageRank and shows you where to check your PageRank if you don’t have the Google Toolbar plugin. Of course, if you did have the plugin, you would be able to see the PageRank of every site you visit in a little box on your browser.

via: ProTycoon

Find Out When Google First Indexed Your Site

If you think Google discovered your site when you launched it, there is a good chance that you wrong. Mani shows you a quick trick to help you determine your Google birthday.

Nurturing and Growing Your blog

What Do You Expect From Your Blog?

Why do you blog? Is it because you enjoy expressing yourself through writing? Maybe it’s to promote a business or service? Are you just trying to make a quick buck? In this post, Jeff breaks down the different types of blogs and offers insight into what you can expect from each.

How to Analyze and Improve Your Bounce Rate

The ‘bounce rate’ is the percentage of visitors who leave your site shortly after arriving; without taking the time to explore your site further. As such, a low bounce rate is the goal. A high bounce rate, however, needs to be addressed. In this post, Maki shows you how to measure your bounce rate, and offers suggestions on how to improve your bounce rate.

7 Things To Do While Not Blogging

If you think blogging is just about writing up posts and crossing your fingers that visitors will come, you’ll be in for a disappointment. You need to look after your site, interact with other bloggers, and plan for the future; Greg shows you how in this post.

Permission Marketing Revisited

A brief background about word of mouth marketing and a reminder that your marketing, in order to be effective, must be permission based. Valeria gives you nine tips.

Factors Affecting The Look Of Your Blog

Effective Use of Blog Sidebars

Steven discusses the value and purpose of the sidebar and what it needs to accomplish. He then points you to great examples of sidebars being used. Read this post for inspiration.

A Small Study Of Big Blogs

Part 1 and Part 2

In this two part series, Smashing Magazine evaluates what the big players are doing (or not doing) with their blogs and offers suggestions on how to create an effective blog design. Part one of the study looks at layout and typography, part two looks at structure, advertisements, and functionality

50+ More Free RSS Feed Icons

Every blog wants as many subscribers as it can get. Attracting readers with a noticeable RSS icon is one way of achieving that goal. In this post, Michael adds 50 free wicked looking RSS icons to his original 60 free icons list.

Designing the Perfect Business Blog: Part (a)

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Photo: anonymous

Malcolm Gladwell in his book, Blink, talks about a phenomenon he calls thin-slicing; an almost instinctual way that human beings filter information in the blink of an eye, by sifting the very few factors that matter from an overwhelming number of variables. To run a successful blog, it is crucial you understand that first impressions count.

First impressions take into account a myriad of elements, but can be best understood if considered from your visitor’s point of view:

(a) What is your visitor thinking while your site/page is loading?

(b) What is your visitor thinking as the page loads?

(c) What is your visitor thinking while he or she is exploring your site?

Today, we’ll take a look at (a):

The impression your blog makes while it is loading

Nowadays, visitors arrive at your blog from a variety of places; search engines, social media sites, or links from other blogs. Usually, the first thing they will see is the URL and title. Very soon after that, if the page takes a long time to load, they’ll start thinking about that too. What about if the link they clicked on is dead? Will you send them to an error page that offers no value? Or will you hit them with a popup or sneaky pop under?

If your visitors are worrying about any of these things before the page they are after loads, they might just hit the backspace key and bypass your site completely. Let’s try and avoid that.

The Importance of Your Domain Name

While I’ve talked about the importance of businesses hosting their blogs on their primary domain in Creating a Blog Strategy, and the various ways you can do this. But, what about businesses that don’t yet have an online presence?

If you’re a business that is young or new, you need to establish your branding immediately. Register a domain name that fits in with your company name, or as close to it as you can.

As you can see with BlogWell, we couldn’t get the domain blogwell.com, and instead opted for blog-well.com. It hasn’t harmed us in search results; you can search ‘blogwell’ blog-well’ or ‘blog well’ in Google, and still find us quickly.

Domain names can include any combination of letters and numbers. The dash symbol (-) is the only other character allowed.

As for the top level domain (com, org, edu, etc.), do everything in your power to get a dot com; it’s what most people automatically think about when typing a URL.

And a final note on domains; make the decision up front whether you want your domain to include ‘www’. While this is not critical for your visitors, it will impact you over time with search engines and ranking in search results.

Once people start linking to you, if you haven’t made a conscious decision on which you prefer, some sites will link to http://www.yourblog.com, others will link to http://yourblog.com. This will just confuse the search engines; they’ll have to split ranking between the two, and this can result in neither receiving the best possible result.

Decide which one you want, and redirect the other to it by way of a permanent redirect (HTTP Status Code 301).

URL: Pretty vs. Ugly Links

As visitors now come from an assortment of places on the Web, there is a greater chance they will land on a specific page, rather than your home page. It then makes sense to ensure you have clean URL’s. By clean, I mean well structured, ordered, and descriptive.

While waiting for a site to load, you’ll notice a URL in the bottom left corner of your browser that tells you which page is loading. If the URL doesn’t correspond to what you were searching for or clicking on, and if you’re anything like me, a tiny alarm may go off in your head: Am I going to the site I thought I was going to, or am I being redirected somewhere sneaky?

Here’s an example of a pretty link and an ugly link; which is easier to understand?

Pretty Link: http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-wimax.htm

Ugly Link: http://radio.about.com/library/bldef-138.htm

The easiest way to ensure you have ‘pretty links’ is by giving your posts relevant and great titles, using blogging software that automates the permalink process (like WordPress), and setting up your permalinks correctly.

Not only does this help your visitor feel more comfortable, but it is also useful to search engines, which will better be able to index your page if it has an easily identifiable title.

Load Time

Advertisements, widgets, and images all take time to load, and who has the time to sit around waiting – especially if you have a slower connection. Your visitors won’t like it, and unless you have a truly unique site that has traffic in the hundreds of thousands, keep these to a minimum to avoid alienating your visitors.

If you don’t know how long it takes for your page to load, visit the Web Page Analyzer for a quick examination. This free tool will let you know how long it takes for your page to load at various connection rates. It will also offer suggestions on how to improve load time if your page loads too slowly.

Bookmark the Web Page Analyzer and make a point of visiting it several times a year – your blog’s community will thank you for it with return visits.

Error Messages: Create a Custom Error Message

What happens when you visit a page that tells you “Error 404: Page Not Found?”

Most people will quickly go back a page to check whether they clicked on the right link.

If they determine that the link is correct, but your site displays an error page, they’ll either go to the next result (if they’re using a search engine), or, if they’re coming from another site that has linked to you, chances are they’ll skip your site altogether.

You don’t want to lose potential visitors this way, and there are a few things you can do about it.

First, create a specific error message page that is a little more gentle (and helpful) than the blunt ‘Page Not Found’ and second, check your site for dead links a couple of times every year.

While it’s easier to navigate around a blog than a website when you come across an error page, it is still worth your while creating a specific page to shows your visitors that you have thought about making their life a little bit easier.

A useful error page may include:

  1. An apology of some type explaining why the page may not be there
  2. A search box with some text encouraging visitors to try searching on your site
  3. A link to your site map that lists all the pages on your site
  4. A list of the most popular posts on your site
  5. A list of categories on your site

Take a look at the following error pages; you may find inspiration.

http://seo2.0.onreact.com/error

http://problogger.net/error

http://www.apple.com/error

Creating an error page is one thing; making sure it appears on your site is another. Once you’ve created your document, you’ll need to upload it to your server. If you’re unsure how to do this, read this post from The Site Wizard that explains the process in plain English.

If you’re using WordPress, take a look at their Creating an Error Page article.

Pop Ups/Pop Unders

According to Enrique De Argaez, the man behind Internet World Stats, Pop Ups and Pop Unders are rude.

I agree. Just Don’t Do It!


This post is (a) of part six in a series of posts designed to help you blog well.

Part 6 is spread over three sections due to the large amount of information we need to cover in designing the perfect business blog.

If you like this post, consider subscribing to our feed so you don’t miss out on the rest of the BlogWell series over the next few weeks:

If you’ve missed the first five, you can find them here:

Does Your Business Blog Have A Personality?

Friday, May 16th, 2008

When considering your blog design, the most important element – and the one too few people consider – is the personality, or the atmosphere of the blog. This is the key factor that determines the success of your blog; it is the also the first impression your blog will have on your new visitor.

If you’ve ever been on a guided tour, you’ll know that much of your experience, be it good or bad, is based on the guide. Some guides are boring, others are entertaining; some offer interesting and pertinent details, others offer such exhaustive information that your head starts spinning; others still, bore you to tears.

Much like a tour guide, when it comes to your business blog, you are the one that must set the mood and the character of your blog. You are the tour guide, and if you want to be considered a great guide, you must address the needs of your audience.

Fortunately, successful business blogs all begin with similar foundations:

Successful Business Blogs Meet Audience Expectation

Making your design appeal to your target audience is critical. Are you writing to a young, hip, techno-nut? Are you writing to a mom? Are you writing to a CEO?

While you don’t want your blog to be the same as all the others out there, being too different from your industry (imagine an engineering firm dressing up their blog to look like webkinz), will just confuse your audience.

I wish I could give you a template for every industry of the ‘right’ look, but there really is no such thing. You need to do the research to ensure you meet your audience’s expectations. Take a look at our recent post about using Alltop to give you design inspiration ideas.

Successful Business Blogs Are Reliable

A business blog, regardless of how aesthetically pleasing, or well coded it is, if it is not seen to be reliable, it will become useless as a tool.

A reliable business blog is one that is written by a reliable source. As a business owner, you are that reliable source. You’ve had industry experience, you keep up to date with industry news, and you can offer advice – not only about your product/service, but also industry trends. The caveat here is you must write in plain English. Your website can be filled with jargon and industry terminology, but your blog is where you need to use your voice in a way that is understood by everyone.

Another factor that affects reliability is how regularly you post. If you want your blog to be successful; to be represented in search engine results, and to build a community of visitors, you must have continuously updated and relevant content.

Visiting your blog and updating once a month is not enough, try and post at least twice a week; daily if time allows, especially if you want your blog to be used as a reference.

Successful Business Blogs Represent Your Brand Appropriately

When it comes to business blogs, it is not enough to focus on your name or logo as your brand; here, your entire site is your brand.

Everything you put on your blog, words, titles, images, logos, as well as the structure, arrangement, navigation and presentation, all make up the essence of your blog; they give your blog personality.

And the personality of your blog will tell potential clients and customers a lot about who you are, how you work, how credible you are, and what you are capable of. In what light do you want your future customers to see you? Are you a strange, disorganized, angry at the world unprofessional, or, a succinct, reliable, organized, and tuned in expert?

Successful Business Blogs Are Intuitively Usable

Your blog will only be successful if you ensure your target audience can intuitively navigate your site – it must be easy to use.

Visitors, especially first time visitors, don’t want to waste their time trying to work out who you are, what you do, and why you do it. You are the guide of this tour, and you need to guide well. Take their hand and gently lead them in the direction you want them to go, or show them the way to get to where they want to go. The easiest way to accomplish this is to forget using witty or clever words for your pages, categories, and titles; again, plain English is a must.

Successful Business Blogs Don’t Look Spammy

How many times have you visited a blog, only to be met by animated images, smiley faces, pop ups/unders, and loads of advertisements? What was your first impression?

A business blog will be successful if the elements listed above are only used when they fit in with the mission and the vision of the blog. In most instances, there is no good reason to use pop-ups, or flashy, animated, smiley things on a business blog.

I visit lots of sites every day, and each time I visit a site that flashes at me, my immediate reaction is “Where am I, and, is this site doing something horrid to my computer?” I usually leave pretty quickly. This is not the message you want to send to potential customers.

While there are various reasons businesses set up blogs, the majority don’t do it to make money. Mostly, it’s about creating a space for like minded folk to visit, or establishing authority in a specific field, or passing along knowledge. If you are starting a blog for any of these reasons, try to avoid putting advertising on your site.

However, if you do decide to use advertisements, try to keep them discreet and in line with your industry.

These blogs provide good examples of fitting advertising to subject, take a look:

On a final note, your business blog should offer different content from your website.

Leave all the sales talk and product pages on your website. Link to them of course, but use your blog to let people get to know you – the person – not your product/brand. Business blogs are all about putting a human face to your company.

If you can think of any fundamentals of great business blogs that I’ve missed here, I’d love to hear about them. I’d also love to hear your thoughts. Please consider leaving a comment below.

Next week in the BlogWell Files, we’ll tackle: Designing the perfect business blog and talk about layout, pages, categories and sidebars – the do’s and don’ts.

This is the fifth in a series of posts about how to blog well.

If you’ve missed the first four, you can find them here:

If you like this post, consider subscribing to our feed so you don’t miss out on the rest of the BlogWell series over the next few weeks:

Part 6: Designing the perfect business blog

Part 7: Developing an editorial calendar

Part 8: Creating unique content

Part 9: Optimizing for search engines

Part 10: Submitting your blog to blog directories

Part 11: Participating in social media

Part 12: Codifying your blogging guidelines

Alltop: Helping You Design A Great Business Blog

Monday, May 5th, 2008

Alltop, all the top stories

I was reading Chris Brogan’s post about Alltop the other day, where he points out:

“Alltop isn’t for you or me. It’s for friends and family and coworkers who aren’t yet surfing at the speed of light with Google Reader…”

It got me thinking.

Yes, Alltop does encourage the mainstream [to participate on the Web in different ways] but it can also serve as an extremely useful tool for new business bloggers; especially during that first scary stage – designing the look and feel of your new blog.

Think about it. As soon as a visitor arrives at your blog, before they read the first word, they react to it in some way.

In that instant, your blog needs to be viewed positively, and the only way this can happen is to ensure that it fits in with what your audience expects it should look like. It must appeal to your target demographic. Sure, the Perez Hilton site may look great and appeal to the younger set looking for celeb goss, but his design doesn’t really make sense for a civil engineering blog.

I wish I could say there is a template out there somewhere of what your blog should look like based on your field of interest, but there isn’t.

However, this is where Alltop comes in brilliantly. Because Alltop is an aggregator of top blogs by topic, it can give you a fair indication of what blogs in specific industries look like.

If you want to blog about law, take a look at the Alltop law page

If you want to blog about health, take a look at the Alltop health page

If you want to blog about photography, take a look at the Alltop photography page

You get the idea.

Go take a look at the Alltop main page for a topic similar to your field, and start researching the design of your new blog!

If you have any comments or questions, I’d love to hear them!

And of course, I can’t end this post without saying thanks to Guy for including BlogWell on the Alltop Blogging page – so, thank you Guy!

Creating a Blog Strategy

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Blog Strategy

Photo Credit Demion

This is the fourth in a series of posts about how to blog well.

If you’ve missed the first three, you can find them here:

While most businesses realize the importance of a blog, too few spend the time putting together a blog strategy before they launch – and this is their biggest mistake.

What results, six months down the track, is a mad scramble with questions like: “Why is no-one visiting?” “Why is no one commenting?” and “Why do we not turn up in Google under our keywords?”

The answer may be as simple as bringing in trainers to educate the bloggers; worst case scenario – a complete overhaul; expensive and time consuming.

Here’s an example. A large corporation (with revenues in the billions last year), recently asked about why their blogs are not turning up in search under specific keywords.

At a glance, there are many reasons:

  • They’re using a content management system that makes trackbacks difficult (links, that is – the all important factor in SEO)
  • Their blogs are written by many people on different platforms with no language consistency, or blogging guidelines
  • Often, blog posts are too short and offer no substantive information
  • The categories, titles, headings, and content don’t include relevant keywords
  • There are too few instances of H2, H3
  • They don’t link to relevant and topic similar sites within their field
  • They don’t include keywords in their title element
  • They don’t make use of meta data (descriptions and keywords)
  • They don’t include tags on their Technorati profile (or on their blogs)
  • Their domain will expire in less than a year (should be renewed for a longer period of time)
  • They don’t make effective use of anchor text

Had this company established a blog strategy up front, they would not be running into problems now. There is no ‘fault’ here, they simply didn’t realize the importance of mapping everything out at the beginning, most people don’t.

The majority of business bloggers fix problems as they encounter them, and this is not the best solution; blogging should be proactive, not reactive.

Creating a blog strategy up front

Your blog strategy needs to address two audiences; visitors and search engines.

You need to consider your visitors, because if you don’t, sure, they may get to your blog, but if it’s not set up in such a way that it is user friendly, they won’t come back.

You also need to consider SEO at this point, because without it, your blog won’t get noticed by search engines, and not turning up in search results equals fewer visitors.

Visitors and search engines must both be able to:

Determine what your site is about – at a glance

Navigate easily throughout your site

Trust that your content will be relevant and useful

Have faith in every link you offer

To cover these four base requirements, you need to examine each of the following elements:

Choose your blogging software/CMS with care

Your choice of content management system or blogging software is important:

If your CMS doesn’t allow for categorization of posts, how can your visitors find topics of interest quickly? How can search engines see your keywords easily as they scan?

If you CMS doesn’t automate trackbacks, does each blogger know how to manually trackback?

If your CMS creates URLs on the fly, is it creating URLs that are good for search engines, that is, keyword rich? Do your bloggers know how to create post slugs so URLs are tidy?

Not only is your choice of CMS important for your visitors and search engines, but it is also relevant to the bloggers who use it daily. If they are having trouble working with it, and don’t know how to manipulate various components, you might consider bringing in a blog consultant to train them, or a blog auditor to evaluate the system.

The best option (if budget allows) is to have a system specifically written/designed for your company. That way, you can build in all the SEO goodies up front.

If your budget doesn’t allow for an individualized CMS, WordPress is your next best choice. The reasons I recommend WordPress are many, but in the main, it comes optimized out of the box, and offers great SEO plugins like the All in one SEO pack.

If you are uncertain of the major differences offered by the various blogging platforms, take a look at part three of our BlogWell series: Choosing a blogging platform.

Host your blog on your own domain

While hosting your blog on a different domain is acceptable for some bloggers, when it comes to business blogging, there is no option. You must put your blog on your primary domain. You’ve spent years building trust and search ranking for your website, why spoil it now by starting anew?

A quick word about domains using WebMama as an example:

This is WebMama’s primary domain: www.webmama.com (the website)

The top-level domain of WebMama is com

The second-level domain is WebMama

The third-level of is www

You have two options when tying in your blog to your primary domain; you can add it as a third-level domain, or to add it as a sub section of your primary domain.

Third level – blog.webmama.com

Sub section – www.webmama.com/blog

Given Barb uses http://blog.webmama.com for her blog and she knows her SEO stuff, I’d say trust in that and use the third level domain for your business blog.

From a visitor point of view, if you’ve built your brand well, the domain you use will help relate your blog to your business. Don’t muddy it up by choosing a different, unique domain that has no relevance to your brand.

Use the same SEO practices for your blog that you use for your website

A lot of companies forget about the title element, meta description and meta keywords when it comes to their blogs. These factors are critical for both search engines, and visitors – in fact with blogs, they may be more important.

By including a decent and unique description for each post, visitors will, when searching for specific keywords, get the description you offer them, not the description that Google determines is right for you.

For instance:

Search on: 100 resources for developers and Google will offer up the following description – a description that I wrote:

“If you’re coding Web stuff, this list gives you the greatest resources out there – saves you from hunting them down yourself. Bookmark it!”

Additionally, it comes up first in Google search (not Google blog search).

Whereas, this post by Brian over at MSDN has no meta description, so Google just pulls out what it thinks is relevant to describe it – from the comments section of all things:

“Mar 31, 2008 … re: Open XML Resources for Developers. @Dave, you want a 100% compliant implementation. As a reference for what you exactly mean with that, …”

I’ve written about title elements and meta descriptions before, but if you want to know more about meta keywords, take a look at Jill Whalen’s post Can Meta tags such as keyword tags bring High Rankings to my site?

When including meta data don’t forget:

  • The title element must be on-topic, short and catchy (for readers), they must also be optimized for search engines
  • The Meta description – same as for websites (160 characters max)
  • Keywords – (10 max) – not too many – looks spammy

Make use of headers (H1, H2, H3) in your post

Each post should be written with thought given to the main heading (H1) or title of the post (not title element – which I’ve mentioned above – and yes, they can be different), as well as subheadings within the post itself.

By breaking up your posts with various subheadings, it makes it easier on the eye for your readers; they can scan and find what they need easily.

Too few bloggers use subheadings when in fact they are amazingly good for SEO. By making headings bold and larger in font, by way of H2, H3 headings that are keyword rich, you are telling the search engines, “Hey, this is important.”

If you have a company with various bloggers, give them a list of predetermined keywords to ensure maximum impact. But teach them to use keywords effectively – too many and suddenly all you have is a spammy looking site that no one wants to visit.

Categories need to be prominent on your blog

Categorizing well on your blog helps your visitors find the topics that interest them quickly. If they need to search your site for that one post about “Green technology” they better find it quick or they’re off to the next blog that is categorized better.

Because of this, categories need prominence in your sidebar. M ake categories understandable – don’t use jargon – to help your visitors, and make them keyword rich and near the top of your site (search engines scan from top to bottom and left to right) for search engine spiders.

‘Keyword rich’ and ‘in plain English’ can coexist – you just need to pull out your trusty thesaurus and expand your vocabulary.

A great example of category placement, with the right mix of plain English and keywords can be found at Dosh Dosh

A final word about categories:

Do not confuse them with Tags (more about tags below), and only submit each post to one category – otherwise you can end up with the dreaded duplicate content that Google hates.

The importance of Tags on business blogs

Tags are a major factor in blog SEO. Most content management systems will let you tag easily, and each post needs to include as many relevant tags as possible. Again, these should come from a predetermined keyword list.

Tags can be made public or private – either way it doesn’t matter – the point is to let Google know that this post is about business blogging, or social media, or SEO2.0, or all three.

Once Google knows about your post, it can send visitors that are interested in what you have to say. There is no limit to the tags you can use, but I’d limit it to 10, much like meta keyword data per post.

Additionally, you should claim your blog at Technorati if you haven’t already, and include keyword rich tags. Some CMS will automate the pinging process (WordPress), with others you may need to do it manually.

Regardless of the CMS, make sure you ping Technorati regularly, and that your bloggers know how to.

Your commenting strategy

Commenting on other blogs, and allowing people to comment on yours, plays a large part in how successful your blog will be.

Regardless of your industry, there is already an active community somewhere online talking about the same subject that you are. If you want to be part of that conversation, you need to contribute to that conversation, by adding useful, related comments.

If you comment well, and adhere to basic comment etiquette, you open up the opportunity for people who haven’t visited your blog to see how you think; if they like what they see in your comment, they’ll follow the link back to your site, and voila, a potential new reader for you.

Commenting Caveats

When you leave a comment on someone else’s blog:

  1. Use your real name, don’t use the name of your brand/product/company.
  2. Leave a URL that points to your blog, not to your landing page or press release.

Take a look at Remarkabloggers Blogging Ethics 101b – Commenting for a more detailed explanation.

Comments on your own blog

Some people advocate not allowing comments until you have a respectable following, and others say don’t allow comments at all, the logic being if people want to comment about something you write, they’ll write a response on their own blog and trackback to your post. My recommendation is to let people comment up front.

Blogging is part of social media, and commenting is all about being social.

And don’t forget the best advice, from Lee Odden’s What Not To Do With Your Business Blog:

“If you are gracious enough to allow readers to make comments,

perhaps responding to a few might be a thought?”

Link Well and Link Often

Linking to others within your niche shows you are willing to share information; this is what good business blogging is about.

While many people avoid linking out (fear of losing visitors to others), it usually has the opposite effect. It shows that you are willing to provide useful information regardless of where it lives, or who wrote it. Your visitors will come back to your site because they know you offer comprehensive information on any given subject.

Of course, you can link out too much, but common sense should prevail. If you make mention of a commonly know site or product, there is usually little reason to link to it. If you are talking about a specific post or person, it may be useful for your readers to know, with one click, what or who that may be.

Another common mistake many bloggers make is that they don’t link back to their own posts, i.e. link internally. While you don’t need to link to every post you have written, if you’ve written about a topic that comes up in a subsequent post, it makes good sense to point to it; both from a visitor point of view (they may not have seen it in the past) and from a search engine point of view – (if you’re pointing it out in a link, much like headings, you’re telling the search engines: “this is important”).

Find your blogging Voice

Unlike a website, a blog allows for natural voice, and natural conversation. You are not trying to win a client – that’s what your website is for – here, you just want to open up any opportunity for a free exchange of ideas.

Finding your blogging voice can be tricky, but as long as you remain true and focus on writing well, both visitors and search engines will love you.

Only one word of warning:

Don’t write when emotive. Whether you’ve just lost your job, broken up with your significant other, or swallowed a pitcher of beer, walk away from your computer before you do yourself harm. Once it’s out there, it’s pretty tricky to take it back.

Understand how archives work

While some people recommend posting the complete article in your archive, I don’t. Not only is it annoying for users that are looking for specific information, it can be a disaster for search engines if you don’t set it up correctly – again, it can be seen as duplicate content.

Archives need to be scannable, much like a site map, and good ones will include a search box. A great way to set up an archive page is to use the ProBlogger Archives page as a guide.

If you’ve created great titles for your posts, that should be enough to help readers find what they are looking for. If you must include your post in the archives, consider using only an excerpt.

Business blogging requires strategy from the start, and I hope this post has given you something to think about. If you’ve already started a corporate blog, reworking it with the above strategies in mind should help you get ahead of your competition. I wish you luck, and if you have any ideas, I’d love to hear them.

If you like this post, consider subscribing to our feed so you don’t miss out on the rest of the BlogWell series over the next few weeks:

Part 5: Blog Layout and presentation: First impressions count!

Part 6: Developing an editorial calendar

Part 7: Creating unique content

Part 8: Submitting your blog to blog directories

Part 9: Participating in social media

Part 10: Codifying your blogging guidelines