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What Do I Need to Start a Blog?
The post What Do I Need to Start a Blog? appeared first on HostGator Blog . Follow This Checklist for Starting Your Blog You’ve decided to join the ranks of the world’s bloggers. That’s a great idea. A blog can bring so many benefits . But now you have to figure out how to get started. Here are the main steps you need to take to start a blog. First, do you already have a website? If so, jump to the next section. If not, you need to start your website first. There are four things you must have to launch a website: 1. Domain Name Your domain is the main address for your website on the web. It’s what people will type in to reach your website directly. A domain name should be as close to the name of your brand as possible. If the .com for the name you most want isn’t available, brainstorm alternative names or variations on the one you have that will be easy for people to remember. You can buy a domain on its own, but in most cases, you can get one for free when you buy the next thing you need. 2. Web hosting All websites must have web hosting . It’s what keeps your site on the web and accessible to visitors. Most web hosting plans include at least one free domain name and many include helpful add-ons that make creating your website easier, like templates or website builders. Some hosting plans are especially suited to working with popular blogging platforms , so if the blog is the entire reason you’re starting a website, look for a plan that’s designed to support that particular need. 3. Web design Once you’ve claimed your space on the web, you have to actually create the site itself. If you’re not skilled at web design, you can still easily put together your own website with the help of a website builder . If you want something that looks more professional or unique, look into hiring a web designer to create your site for you. If you want the blog to be the main focus of the site, make that clear going in. Your website should be designed to drive people directly to your content. 4. Copy When people land on your website, they’ll want to know where they are and what the site is all about. Before you launch your website, you’ll need to figure out the best words to use to explain to people what your website is and why they should stick around. It’s worth considering a professional copywriter for this part, particularly if you want your website to encourage people to take a specific action – like buying a product. If your goal is mostly just to share your ideas with the world, then you might not need to hire someone for this, but be sure to spend some time researching online copywriting if you do it yourself so you do it right. The 5 Things You Need to Start Blogging With all the website basics in place, you can start thinking specifically about the blog now. There are five main things you need to create a blog. 1. A blog strategy Chances are, you want your blog to accomplish something. Otherwise, why not just put your writing into a personal journal? For your blog to be effective at achieving whatever your goals are, you’ll need to take time before you start writing to clearly define a strategy. Determine what your main goals for your blog are and brainstorm a specific plan for how best to achieve them. Think about things like: Who you want to reach How often you want to publish new posts (be realistic here!) The types of content you want to create How you’ll measure success How to reach the audience you want How to keep the audience you find Blogging isn’t easy. You’ll get more out of it for the time you put in if you spend a little time upfront deciding exactly what you want to get out of it and how. 2. A blogging platform You have a number of blogging platforms to choose from. WordPress (pictured below) is by far the most popular and is designed to be easy to use, even for brand new bloggers learning the basics . But some other platforms provide benefits you may appreciate, like more customization options or simpler functionality. Review your options and determine which one is right for your needs. 3. A content schedule And now we reach the hard part – the nitty gritty of keeping a blog going. Creating new content regularly takes time and energy. If you’re going to keep up with it, you need to consistently commit time to getting it done (or hire someone to do it for you). Brainstorm topic ideas in advance and have a calendar planned out for what you’ll be publishing when – before you start writing. Devote time on your schedule daily or weekly, based on how often you plan to publish. Set separate deadlines for writing, editing, and publishing. Your schedule (and your ability to keep it) is one of the most important parts of keeping a blog going. Without it, you’re likely to let it fall off soon after starting. 4. Images At this point, readers expect blog posts to include images. They’re 80% more likely to read your posts to begin with if you add an image to it. Plan on devoting some time (and possibly budget) for finding at least one image to go with each post. You can find high-quality images for free on a number of websites, or even better, make your own. Original images tend to perform better than stock photography, but they do take more time to create. 5. A promotion plan Blogging is competitive. If you’re going to get people to pay attention to your blog posts out of the many, many others out there, you have to do something to get their attention first. That means content promotion is a necessity. Look into different online marketing tactics for increasing awareness of your blog. Consider getting involved in social media, guest posting on other relevant blogs, and teaming up with influencers. You’ll probably need to try out a few different types of promotion tactics to get a feel for what works best for your audience and blog. Pay attention to your analytics as you go so you can measure what promotion efforts get you results. Conclusion Several of the things you need to start a blog are simply a matter of getting the structure into place, but some of the most important parts of the process are ongoing. Be prepared to commit real time and energy to the process. For your blog to be successful, you have to put the work in. But if it connects with the audience you most want to reach, it will be well worth it. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
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Tagged hostgator, online-marketing, schedule, social-media, things, vodahost, web hosting, your-website
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Networking for Small Business: 4 Things You Need to Know
The post Networking for Small Business: 4 Things You Need to Know appeared first on HostGator Blog . How to Network Like Your Small Business Depends On It Networking can be daunting for small business owners because it takes time, energy, and a certain amount of extroversion if you’re meeting people in person. But networking is essential for connecting with prospects and building a peer group to help you work through business decisions, learn about new trends in your field, and promote each other’s work. Networking doesn’t have to be hard. If you know what you want to accomplish and how you work best, you can find a networking approach that works for you. 1. Know Your Networking Goals Small business owners are sometimes disappointed with their networking efforts because they lump networking and marketing together. Networking may lead to sales eventually, but expecting any particular networking event to generate new business is like expecting to get married at the end of a coffee date. (Sales expert Jill Konrath describes a similar problem with rushed sales pitches .) What are some realistic networking goals? Goal #1: Get on their Radar Letting people know what you do is step one in networking. You can let people know what you’re doing without being too promotional, and you can introduce yourself to prospects without trying to make a sale. Your URL is enough to let people check out your business and learn more at this stage. Goal #2: Learn More About Your Industry Networking with other business owners is a great way to find out what works, what doesn’t, and what’s the next big thing in your niche or region. This should be an ongoing part of your networking. Goal #3: Build Relationships This is the big goal. Whether you’re building relationships with prospective and current customers, getting to know vendors, checking in with your peers, or touching base with people in media, the real aim of networking is to build connections to people who share some of the same professional interests and goals so you can help one another succeed. 2. Know Your Networking Style Does meeting new people give you a boost of energy? Congratulations, extrovert! You’re an ideal candidate for in-person networking. Do you feel drained after a big meeting or crowded event? Welcome, introvert! You’ll probably excel at networking online. These are generalizations, of course, and you don’t need to stick to only one approach. When you’re new to networking, though, it’s easier to start if you’re comfortable. You can always branch out later as your skills and confidence grow. Here are some of your options. Digital Networking Online networking opportunities may be the best thing about social media. Industry groups on Facebook and LinkedIn give you access to people in your industry, and local business groups on Facebook can help you keep up with events you may want to attend in person. You can also set up your own groups on these platforms or on Skype or Slack to keep in touch with your colleagues and bounce ideas off each other. If you follow industry leads and experts on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter, comments and replies can be a great place to connect with others in your field. Make sure that your social profiles include a link to your website for people who want to learn more. Local In-Person Groups and Events From general groups like chambers of commerce to specific niche groups for different professions, there’s probably at least one local group near you where you can do some local networking. If you live in a mid-size or larger city, there may even be neighborhood-level groups that host business networking events. Even if you’re not ready to mingle in person, sign up for their emails to get a sense of how active they are and who participates. Regional and National Conferences TED events. SXSW. CES. There’s no shortage of conferences and industry trade shows you could attend. Before you invest in conference admission and travel expenses, research your options to make sure you’ll have the opportunity to make connections in line with your goals. Conferences also have email lists, social media channels, and webinars you can sign up for to find people to connect with throughout the year. 3. Know Your Networking Budget Once you’ve found options that feel comfortable and fit your goals, focus on the ones that fit your budget and schedule. If you’re an an extrovert with a new digital business to launch, trade shows and big events like SXSW could be well worth the investment of several days and a few thousand dollars in registration, travel, and lodging costs. If attending a big conference isn’t doable, present your gregarious self to local groups and to media outlets as an expert they can contact for quotes and interviews on topics in your field. HARO is a great way to connect with reporters. My fellow introverts may be thinking we’ve got the sweetest deal because most of our preferred networking options are so inexpensive: a LinkedIn Premium membership, local business group dues, and national professional groups. There are some pricier introvert-friendly networking options that can pay off, too. Paid mastermind groups give a small group of working professionals access to knowledge and feedback from an industry expert. A good mastermind group can help you step up your game and build close connections to people in your business —and you can stay connected long after the program is done to talk about rates, contracts, and business trends. 4. Know Your Networking Etiquette Once you’ve figured out your best networking methods, growing and maintaining a healthy professional network is relatively easy. Offer a good product or service and treat your connections the way you’d like them to treat you. Please and Thank You Go a Long Way Respect your connections’ time when you make a request or issue an invitation, and don’t take it personally if they’re too busy to engage. Always thank people who share their expertise, offer their advice, or send you referrals. Be the Connection You Want to See When you have information you think your connections can use, share it with them. Do you have a client project you need to hand off? Refer it to someone in your network. Did one of your peers earn an award? Give them a shout out on social media. When you get a boost from someone in your network, give them credit for the assist. Bring Something to Share At in-person networking events, bring something to hand out as you connect with people. It can be as simple as your business card or as fancy as samples from your bake shop or boutique. Make sure it’s branded so people will remember where they got that bonbon or handmade soap. When you set realistic goals, choose methods you like, and treat your connections well, you’re on the way to building a professional network that’s worth the effort. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
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Tagged advice, budget, connection, connections, facebook, game, hosting, investment, networking, social-media
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10 Awesome Link Building Ideas for Blogs
The post 10 Awesome Link Building Ideas for Blogs appeared first on HostGator Blog . Link Building Ideas for Bloggers Whether your blog is a marketing tool for your brand or a personal blog you started to share your passion, you want people to see it. For all the work you put into writing and editing regular posts and finding just the right images to put alongside them to pay off, you need people to find those posts. And the main way people go looking for content like yours online is by searching Google or other search engines. For most blogs, showing up in the search results requires doing some link building. Link building is one of the most important and hardest parts of SEO. Google sees links back to your blog as an indication that people like and respect your work. Each external link from a quality website is a signal to the search engines that your website is quality too. It’s largely because link building is the hardest part of SEO to do well that it’s so important. Everyone can do the easy stuff; building high-quality links is how you become more competitive. Here are ten link-building strategies you can use to help boost your blog’s authority and make headway in the search engines. 1. Do a Quote Roundup Post. You’ve seen posts like this. They’re the ones that include quotes from a bunch of different experts on the same general subject. They’re popular for end-of-year posts (The Top Trends of 2018) or just any post that’s trying to pack a lot of different tips and insights into one place. We’ve even done a few of these here at HostGator. Influencers in your industry are often willing to contribute to these because they get a link back to their site and a chance to show their expertise on the subject in question. That benefits you because they’re that much more likely to share the post with their networks and/or link back to it in future posts on their own website. Quote roundup posts won’t guarantee you new links, but they’re a good way to get other influencers to help promote a post on your blog, thus bringing your content to a new audience. Those extra eyes on your blog may translate to more followers and new relationships, both of which are things that tend to correlate with more links. 2. Write Guest Posts. A guest post is a blog post you write for someone else’s blog that’s valuable to their audience. As long as the other blog covers topics that are relevant to your blog and target audience, it’s a good opportunity to reach new people and include a link or two back to your blog. Guest posting takes a lot of work – you have to identify the right blogs to pitch, convince them to publish your work, and write a really good post that appeals to their followers – and do all this for free. But if your post is good and the other blog is a good fit for the people you’re trying to reach, you could gain new followers and more traffic in addition to the links you build back to your blog. One thing that’s really important to remember here is to be careful how much you self-promote or link back to your blog in a guest post. A lot of blogs won’t bother publishing your post if it’s seems promotional or spammy. Stick with one or two relevant links tops, and only mention your brand if or when it makes natural sense to do so. 3. Accept Guest Posts. Hear me out – I know it sounds like this is the best way to let other people build links on your site, but each of those people is likely to then promote your blog. As with quote roundup posts, this may not immediately earn you a bunch of new links, but it will help you build relationships with people who are more likely to promote your blog and link back to your posts over time. 4. Look for Resource Pages. A lot of blogs and businesses will put together pages or posts that collect helpful resources their readers might appreciate. Any pages that do this for websites that are like yours could be an opportunity for a link. To identify pages like this , think of the main keywords that describe what your website does and get to searching. If your blog is full of healthy vegan recipes, search for terms like vegan blog resources, vegan blog links and other variations on those terms. For every relevant resource page you find, see if you can find contact information for the site webmaster and craft a pitch for why your website deserves to be added. You should expect for a lot of your emails to be ignored. You’re essentially reaching out to a stranger and asking them to do work as a favor to you. But if you send out 100 emails and get two new links on high authority websites, the effort will be worth it. 5. Find Broken Links. Broken links are annoying for website visitors and owners alike. Every time someone clicks on one on your website, it’s a bad experience for them that reflects badly on you (unless you follow these tips to make your 404 experience a positive one ). Broken link building is based on the idea that by alerting a website owner to a broken link on their website and suggesting a good replacement, you’re helping them out. Where most link building strategies amount to asking other website owners to do you a favor, in this case the favor’s more reciprocal. Finding examples of relevant broken links around the web can be difficult, but there are a number of broken link tools that help you find any broken links on a particular website, as well as SEO tools that deliver reports of broken links based on keywords or topic areas. For each relevant broken link you find, you can either contact the webmaster to recommend a piece of content you already have that makes a good replacement, or create a new piece of content if you don’t already have one. 6. Create a Statistics Roundup. Writers love statistics. They’re a good, solid way to back up any point they make in an article or blog post. As such, original research and data are some of the best types of content for earning new links. If you have the resources to create original research, definitely do that. But it does require a lot of work and the right tools and some bloggers aren’t up to the task. In that case, the next best thing is to try to collect existing statistics your audience is likely to be looking for all in one place. By bringing a large number of statistics together into one place in an easily accessible format, you’re providing value to the people (including writers) out there looking for that information. If writers find the stat they’re looking for on your website – even if you’re not the one that originated it – you may be the one to earn that link. Note: a lot of writers will follow the link you include back to the original source to check its authenticity and will prefer to use that link instead in their post. But don’t let that keep you from including that link back to the source – a stat that doesn’t point back to its source is less trustworthy (and less likely to attract links). In some cases though, that stat will be behind a form or shared in a format that’s less user-friendly than your post, which will make linking back to your blog post the better choice for their readers. This is especially true if you find a way to add value, such as with the helpful graphics HelpScout included in their statistics roundup. 7. Create and Give Out Awards. You know what happens when a person or company receives notice that they’ve won an award? In most cases at least, they want to publicize it. They may write about it on their blog, send out a press release, or promote their win on all their social media channels – in short, send a bunch of links and promotion back to the source. To be clear, well known brands or awards are more likely to get that response, but even little known brands or blogs that create awards can get a similar reaction, simply because people like getting awards. It gives them something to brag about and point to as evidence that they’re doing well. Why not create your own award? Give it a snazzy name (possibly one that sounds something like your blog) and start looking for other blogs, influencers, companies, or people in your niche that you think should be winners. Create a logo (or hire a graphic designer to do so) and encourage them to post it on their websites. It’ll earn you both links and general goodwill in the community. 8. Write Reviews or Product Comparisons. Whatever topic you cover on your blog, there are probably some products that your readers consider relevant. And product reviews and comparisons are very useful to readers who want to make sure they’re making the right choice when deciding which product to buy. They can always see what the brands behind the products have to say on their own website, but that’s worth less to them than unbiased information from a third party. Somebody with a photography blog will have readers interested in information to help them buy the right camera. Pointing them toward a specific camera you’ve used and know is great, and explaining everything about it that works well and all the little (or not so little) things about it that don’t work well is exactly what they need to hear before buying. Even better, if you’ve tried out three similar cameras and can explain how they’re different and their relative strengths and weaknesses, you’re providing triple the information to help people make a decision. Not only will your reviews or product comparison posts provide value to people in your target audience, but they’ll be likely to attract links as well. The brands selling those products have an interest in linking to any positive reviews of their products. And any writer working on content where they know that information will be valuable to their readers, such as say, a blog post on how to get started as a photographer , will have good reason to link back to your detailed post. 9. Use the Skyscraper Technique. The search rankings are a competition and some keywords are much more competitive than others. If you can identify keywords that are relevant to your topic, but currently only have lackluster or mildly good content in those top spots, that’s a keyword you can easily compete with. The skyscraper technique is about finding those top ranking blog posts that aren’t as good as your content, then creating a truly awesome blog post that’s obviously better. Once you’ve got your awesome blog post done and published, you can reach out to the websites that linked to the mediocre content that’s currently ranking and recommend that they consider replacing that link with your more thorough and helpful content. If the original post has obvious errors or is outdated, make sure to include that in your case. 10. Connect with Other Bloggers. You’ll notice that a couple of the earlier recommendations on this list prioritize building relationships . That’s because relationships are a huge part of link building. People are less likely to link to a stranger from a blog they’ve never heard of than they are to someone they’ve interacted with and know is legit. If you re-tweet other bloggers in your space, share their content, leave comments on their blog, or find ways to collaborate with them – then you’ll get on their radar. Once they know you, they’ll be more likely to pay attention to your content and share it or link to it anytime they’re impressed by what you wrote or know the link will add something valuable to their post. This is a long game. You can’t introduce yourself to a blogger in your space today and expect a link tomorrow, but starting to build relationships now and become a part of the larger community will pay off over time. Conclusion None of these strategies are particularly easy. All of them will require a time commitment and some significant work. But if you want your potential readers to find your awesome blog posts, this type of work is the difference between only being found by those who already know you, and showing up in the search engines for the topics you cover. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
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Tagged awesome, building-ideas, content, hostgator, hosting, industry, networks, publishing, readers, social-media, web hosting, work
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