Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Top Misc Content on Internet

Top Misc Content on Internet


Copywriting for Adwords

Posted: 21 Sep 2011 06:28 PM PDT

Writing for Google Adwords is a real challenge

Writing compelling ad copy for your Google Adwords ads, or other PPC ads is a real challenge. You have a small window of opportunity to make an impression on your target market and the rate at which you make an impression has an effect on your quality score, which has a knock-on effect for your ad position.

Your ad copy needs to be concise and direct – it can have a huge effect on your conversion rate if you get it right so it’s worth spending a little time trying to improve. You also have to be prepared to test variations, that’s definitely the case with PPC – testing is king.

An understanding of customer or prospective customer impression of your business can influence your ad copy. You want to focus on what they perceive to be the competitive advantage of your product or service. Are you cheapest? Offer fastest shipping? Free delivery? Or simply just the best product? Whatever it is that makes you better needs to be conveyed in the 95 characters on offer in your ad – that’s why professional copywriting can be a wise investment for internet advertisers.

Explaining Job Hopping Satisfactorily in an Interview

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 09:00 PM PST

Switching jobs after a short time period has become quite common among today's youngsters. However, to get a new job, candidates need to explain the exact reason for which they changed jobs and assure their interviewer that they will prove to be an asset for the organization. In this article, we shall understand how to explain job-hopping satisfactorily in an interview.

Member Speed LATEST ~ Crackit.info

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 11:14 PM PST

Micro Niche Finder LATEST ~ Crackit.info

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 10:30 PM PST

Micro Niche Finder LATEST ~ Crackit.info

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 08:35 PM PST

Contently: Empowering and connecting quality writers and brands.

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 07:37 PM PST

Member Speed LATEST ~ Crackit.info

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 07:28 PM PST

Article Writing Services

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 06:57 PM PST

Ezine Article Submission - Submit Your Best Articles For Massive Exposure, Ezine Publishers Get 25 Free Article Reprints

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 06:53 PM PST

49 Creative Ways You Can Profit From Content Marketing — Copyblogger

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 06:53 PM PST

How to Develop Your Website’s Tone of Voice

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 06:52 PM PST

The Best Freelance Writers, Blog Writers, Content Writers, Article Writing and Screenwriting -- Scripted.com

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 06:44 PM PST

How to Build an Engaged Audience with Content Marketing

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 03:00 AM PST

image of danny iny's engagement book

Most bloggers are after the same things.

They want traffic to their blogs, comments on their posts, and sales of their products or services.

These are all great goals, but they're really just symptoms of something else: having an engaged and responsive audience.

You can't have a lot of consistent traffic, comments, or sales without a great audience — your traffic source will dry up sooner or later (AdWords, anyone?), your commenters will stop commenting, and your sales will disappear.

But what if you don't have an audience at all? How do you build an engaged audience if you're starting from scratch?

That's the question that I asked 30 different audience-building masters. Let’s take a look at their answers to these questions …

Many paths up the mountain

I reached out to the most successful audience-builders that I could think of; people like Guy Kawasaki, Mitch Joel, and Copyblogger's own Brian Clark.

I asked them how they would go about building an engaged audience if they had to start from scratch. Something interesting happened: their answers were all different from each other.

Sure, there were some consistent threads (know your audience, provide value, etc.), but the differences were often bigger than the similarities, and the focus of each answer was distinct and unique.

So I broadened the net, and asked more successful audience-builders to weigh in:

  • I approached internet marketing experts like Derek Halpern from Social Triggers, Ana Hoffman from Traffic Generation CafĂ©, and Corbett Barr from Think Traffic.
  • I approached social media pundits like Mark Schaefer from {grow}, Danny Brown from Bonsai Interactive, and Gini Dietrich from Arment Dietrich and Spin Sucks.
  • I approached bloggers like Kristi Hines (Kikolani), Marcus Sheridan (The Sales Lion), and Linda Bustos, who blogs at Get Elastic.
  • I approached entrepreneurs like Anita Campbell (founder of SmallBizTrends and BizSugar), Dino Dogan (co-founder of Triberr), and Adam Toren (founder of YoungEntrepreneur, and many other businesses).
  • And I approached authors, like Alexander Osterwalder (Business Model Generation), Randy Komisar (The Monk and the Riddle and Getting to Plan B), and Sean Platt (Writing Online, Yesterday's Gone, and many other titles).

Of course, these categories (blogger vs. entrepreneur vs. author, etc.) blur into each other. Mark Schaefer and Adam Toren are both published authors, Dino Dogan and Marcus Sheridan are experts on social media, Linda Bustos is a sharp internet marketer, and most of the people on the list are entrepreneurs.

But you get the point, which is that these people have a great diversity of knowledge and expertise!

Their answers, and those of a dozen others that I approached, started rolling in, and I started noticed the answers grouping around a few common themes:

  • Start with the Fundamentals
  • Know and Love Your Audience
  • You Have to Get Content Right
  • Add Social Media to the Mix
  • Be Your Passionate Self
  • Learn from Experience

The first group of answers was all about the fundamentals …

Start with the fundamentals

The very first step to building an engaged audience is be super-clear about what type of audience you need, and why you need it. For example:

  • Do you want an audience to feed an existing business?
  • Do you want an audience to drive a new business?
  • Do you want to be a celebrity?
  • Are you just trying to get the word out about a product or service?
  • Will success be measured in followers, in conversations, or in conversions?

You might not need a detailed strategy, and integrity are always going to be important — but if you don't know why you're doing what you're doing, how will you even know where to start, and whether you're moving in the right direction?

Once you know where you're going and why, it's time to start thinking about the audience …

It's all about your audience

You have to know your audience — that much is a given.

If you don't know your audience — their wants, their needs, their hopes and their fears — then you won't be able to write stuff that they want to read, raise issues that they want to discuss, or create products that they want to buy.

So you have to know your audience, but just knowing them isn't enough. If you really want to build an engaged audience, you have to love your audience, too, for a couple of reasons.

First of all, if you don't love your audience, you probably won't end up knowing them as well as you need to, and your audience-building efforts will be doomed from the get-go.

More importantly, though, building an audience is a slog — it's a long, hard process, and you need to be committed enough to stay the course for the long haul. If you love your audience, then every email and tweet that you receive will give you a small boost of motivation to keep on going.

If you don't love them, though, the tweets and emails will turn into an annoying distraction, your resentment will rise, and you'll find yourself in a descending spiral of negative emotions directed at your blog — hardly a foundation for success!

Assuming you're targeting an audience that you know and love, or love enough to get to know, you're ready to start working on content.

It's also all about content

Strategic, high-quality content, as Copyblogger readers already know, is the cornerstone of your audience-building strategy, for several reasons:

  • Without publicly available content, it's hard to get people to come check you out. (What are you going to tell them about?)
  • Without content, it's hard to get them to discuss or engage. (As Cory Doctorow put it, “Conversation is king. Content is just something to talk about.”)
  • Without content, it's hard to get people to tell other people about you or your stuff. (What will they point their friends to, if not content?)
  • Without content, it's hard to get people to come back. (Even if they liked you, they won't return, and eventually they'll forget.)

Which is all fine and dandy — I already knew that content was important, just like you do. But the experts said a lot more about content than just to say that it is important. They shared what content to create, how to create it, and where to put it to get maximum effect.

In a nutshell:

What content to create: Content that is relevant to the needs and wants of your audience — content that is useful, and entertaining. Extra points if you can get people talking about your stuff by creating content that is in some way taboo, unusual, outrageous, hilarious, or remarkable.

How to create it: By buckling down, and doing the work. All of the experts were very consistent on this point — there is absolutely no substitute for hard work; so spend the time that you need to research your audience's needs, find solutions to their problems, and give it to them. Extra points if you can do it in a way that is different from your competition (for example, by using a different format, like short vs. long content, or text vs. audio vs. video).

Where to put it: Where people are going to see it. If you're just starting out, that means on other people's blogs (yup, I'm talking about guest posting). Alternatively, put it on your blog, but have a plan for how you're going to get people to actually read it!

Once content is covered, it's time to start reaching out with social media…

The trick is social media

It turns out that social media is a lot more about being social, and a lot less about the actual media.

That's good news, because it means that while it's easy to get confused by all the different social media platforms (Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+) and tools (Triberr, Klout, etc.) that are available, as long as you focus on the “people” part of it all, you'll do just fine.

So how do you focus on the “people” part? In the words of Gini Dietrich, you just need to “stroke people's egos.”

Marcus Sheridan expanded on this in a discussion of the “Five Levels of Networking Like a Superstar”:

  • Level I: Comments/RT 101 — These are the very basics of leaving a “great post”-type of comment, and RTing when you notice a tweet that you'd like to share.
  • Level II: Advanced Commenting and RT — Your comments become more thoughtful and insightful, and your RTs include a personal touch and recommendation.
  • Level III: Learning to Give Love — This is all about mentioning others. When you see people do good work, mention it to your friends. Share the links, and share the love.
  • Level IV: A Complete Focus on Promoting Others as Much as Yourself — At this stage, your attention shifts; you aren't just promoting people because you want them to return the favor. At this stage, you're promoting them because you genuinely want them to succeed.
  • Level V: Above and Beyond — This is when you go above and beyond, and there's no script you can follow, because it arises from genuine caring. When you see that someone needs some help, or that you have an opportunity to be thoughtful and nice, you do it.

As you work your way up the ladder, you'll notice that your social media relationships are getting stronger, and your sphere influence is getting wider — all because you're actually being helpful!

While you're working on content and social media, it's important not to lose sight of yourself.

Be yourself, and be passionate

The fact of the matter is that building an engaged audience can be a scary proposition.

  • It can take forever …
  • Rewards, if they come at all, can come very slowly …
  • You may have to share more of yourself than you're comfortable sharing …
  • People will judge you …
  • There's a ridiculous amount of competition …
  • And worst of all, failure is a very real possibility …

For all of these reasons, it's easy to fall into the trap of emotionally distancing yourself from your audience — both to be whoever you think your audience wants you to be, and to shield yourself from criticism and judgment.

Don't fall into that trap. Be yourself, be passionate, and eventually, the audience will respond.

And to avoid some bumps in the road, you can learn from the mistakes of others.

Learn from the mistakes of others

It's great to have a list of things to do (know your goals, love your audience, create great content, network like a superstar, etc.), but it's even more useful to know what not to do.

Some of the pitfalls that I was warned away from include:

  • Brand your name, too. Sure, you can go ahead and create a brand around a business or blog name (like Copyblogger), but make sure that your audience knows who you are, too. (Who doesn't know Brian Clark or Sonia Simone?)
  • Don't wait to start your list. This was the most commonly reported newbie mistake — even if your traffic is in the single digits, you've got to give your burgeoning audience a way of raising their hands and following you.
  • Stick with the good crowd. As you go about making friends and forming alliances with other audience-builders, pay attention to how they treat their other friends. If they're too quick to turn on them at the first perceived transgression, then you might want to look elsewhere.
  • Don't skip the preparation. You may have been able to skip your homework and just wing it in school, but when it comes to audience-building, that isn't a good strategy. Take the time to research what they really need, and how their needs are currently being met — it's the only way you'll be able to offer a better solution.
  • Don't genericize yourself. Don't try to blend in, and adopt the same practices that everyone else is adopting. Be different, and be unique. Sure, some people will judge you, and some people will complain — but others will remember you, and want to follow.

Do any of these mistakes sound familiar?

They did to me, but hopefully you haven't made them yet, and now you can avoid them! ;)

Is this enough information to make your head spin? Then I've got just the thing.

Get 239 pages of audience-building insight … free!

I compiled the answers that I got from 30 audience-builders into a book called Engagement from Scratch! How Super-Community Builders Create a Loyal Audience, and How You Can Do the Same!

Today, the book is launching, and I'm very excited to be able to share it with you — for free!

Yep, that's right — the book is free. You can download the entire book without paying a cent. Just visit the book's website, click on the download link, and tell me what email address to send it to, and moments later you'll the full-length PDF waiting for you in your inbox.

You see, I wanted to be sure that anybody who wants access to the book could have it. Which is why the digital version is free.

But I do want you to buy the book, and I think you want to buy it, too. That's why there are tons of launch bonuses that you can get when you buy a paperback copy of the book.

And let's be honest here… 239 pages is an awful lot of content to read on a digital screen. These aren't 239 pages that you're going to be skimming and skipping through, either — every single one of the book's contributors put their heart and soul into giving you the best advice that they possibly could — so you're going to want to read it.

Isn't it worth spending a bit of money to get the paperback version, so that you can read on the couch or in bed, and write notes in the margins?

About the Author: Danny Iny (@DannyIny) is an author, strategist, serial entrepreneur, expert marketer, and the Freddy Krueger of Blogging. Together with Guy Kawasaki, Brian Clark and Mitch Joel, he wrote the book on how to build an engaged audience from scratch.

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Monday, November 28, 2011

Top Misc Content on Internet

Top Misc Content on Internet


Tips for the First Day of a New Job

Posted: 27 Nov 2011 09:00 PM PST

You want to make sure that your first day in the new office is a memorable and happy one. Don't worry, here are a few useful tips to help you with the first day of a new job.

Member Speed LATEST ~ Crackit.info

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 11:12 PM PST

EzineMark - Free Content Article Directory

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 09:04 PM PST

Snipsly

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 08:20 PM PST

5 Ways to Never Run Out of Blog Post Ideas

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 07:47 PM PST

Maxprog Email Extractor LATEST ~ Crackit.info

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 07:32 PM PST

Spudaroo.com: For resumes, web content, business plans, presentations and much more!

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 07:11 PM PST

inessential.com: Pub Rules

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 06:14 PM PST

Article Writing Services

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 06:09 PM PST

Der beste Freund des Social Media Marketing: der Text

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 02:40 PM PST

SliQ Submitter Shared -- Crackit.info

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 01:12 PM PST

How to Write Weapons-Grade Copy

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 03:00 AM PST

image of military tankYou might not think that DARPA (the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) would be very concerned about writing copy.

These are the folks who helped invent computer networking, Predator drones, and Iron Man-like military exoskeletons.

But in fact, DARPA is investing in one particular kind of wordsmithing: stories.

Why is storytelling, one of the oldest human activities, of such interest to DARPA, an agency dealing in technology so advanced that it often sounds like science fiction?

That stories have remained a part of human behavior for so long is exactly what interests DARPA. One of their project descriptions recently led to a request for proposal that says,

Narratives exert a powerful influence on human thoughts and behavior. They consolidate memory, shape emotions, cue heuristics and biases in judgment, influence in-group/out-group distinctions, and may affect the fundamental contents of personal identity.

Story power

In my new book Brainfluence: 100 Ways to Persuade and Convince Consumers with Neuromarketing, I describe how stories wield an amazing power on human attention.

Scientists believe that we are hard-wired to pay attention to stories. In our hunter-gatherer days, we gained a huge evolutionary advantage when we developed the ability to communicate information with descriptive stories.

Most animals rely on experience or direct observation to learn; a mother bear can’t tell her cub not to eat the red berries if he goes into the meadow. But humans can give each other detailed narratives about food, danger, and opportunities. It’s not surprising that evolution favored those who could effectively use this form of communication.

Stories engage our brains. One experiment found that stories that described vivid action lit up the same areas of a reader’s brain as those in a person performing that action. (See Your Brain on Stories.)

In other words, read about a carpenter pounding a nail and your brain will light up as if you were actually swinging a hammer.

Another experiment used spoken stories. The scientists monitored the brain activity of both a person telling a story and an attentive listener. To their surprise, they found that the two brains began to synchronize, with the listener’s activity mirroring that of the storyteller.

All this research tells us what persuasive writers have long known. If you want to connect with your audience, whether your copy will be read or listened to, you should incorporate a story.

Instead of providing a list of facts and statistics showing how much money your product can save, tell the first-hand story of a customer who used your product to save money and get promoted.

What makes a good marketing story?

When you are writing a story for a web or print ad, you need a different approach than if you are writing a novel or even a short story.

You’ve got a limited amount of both space and reader attention to work with, so you have to accomplish a lot in a few words. A novelist can take many pages to establish a character, but you have to do it in a few words. You can’t spend a lot of time setting up a situation or conflict, either.

Here’s are some ways to get around those limitations:

  • Use characters and problems already familiar to the reader. Roles like demanding customers, fussy kids, or impatient bosses don’t need a lot of description. They can convey a lot of information in a succinct way.
  • Be specific. The protagonist of the story should be much like the targeted buyer. Just as a smart missile homes in on a specific target, you need to shape your story to persuade a well-defined customer.
  • Use vivid language. Vague descriptions and passive verbs are your enemy. Use vivid descriptors and active verbs to engage your reader or listener.
  • Set up the conflict, crisis, or threat. If you’ve ever been disappointed by a book or movie where “not much happened,” it’s because most engaging narratives feature an important conflict or threat. Whether it’s James Bond saving the planet from annihilation, or merely a plucky mail room clerk overcoming a domineering boss for career success, conflicts and threats in a story keep us interested.
  • Make your customer the hero. In engaging stories, the hero resolves the issue despite difficult obstacles and long odds. In the best marketing stories, the product is the “weapon” used by the real hero — your customer. If your customer can project himself into the story and imagine using your product to achieve similar success, your story is a winner.

Stories have a deep emotional impact and can actually change our thinking.

If DARPA, sometimes described as “100 geniuses connected by a travel agent,” wants to use stories to change opinions and behaviors, shouldn’t marketers consider tapping into their power, too?

About the Author: Roger Dooley is a marketing speaker, author of Brainfluence, and publisher of the blog Neuromarketing. He is the founder of Dooley Direct, a marketing consultancy, and co-founded College Confidential, the leading college-bound website. On Twitter, he can be reached at @rogerdooley.

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Top Misc Content on Internet