Inside a Blog Post

Categories: Blogging

If you’re new to blogging, this is a brief introduction into what you’ll be dealing with on a daily basis - the blog post.  In its simplest form, the blog post serves as the preferred communication method between a blogger and the reader, the place where content is stored.  No matter what type of blog platform or theme you are using, the basic post likely looks like the one shown in the image. 

Inside a Blog Post

Main Elements of a Post
[Click on image to see larger version]

The post itself is quite complex, with text that may have taken a few hours to produce, and further time to follow up with - approving and replying to comments and editing the post at a later date with new information.  Each post can provide immense help to those looking for the information, and once you harness the power of language, you will be able to convey your point across to nearly any audience.

What’s Inside Each Post

Note: This guide follows the default layout of posts.

Near the top of each and every post, there is a Title, which typically provides a brief thesis statement about what the post is about before the reader even enters the main content.  Below this, there is the Post Date, which defines the date (and sometimes time) when the post was published, primarily used for archive and reader purposes - is this information still relevant?

Often, but not always, the Post Author and brief information about the author is placed at the top or, alternately, at the bottom of the post.  In addition, Categories and/or tags are listed, which further helps categorize the post and the insight that it provides to readers.

The largest parts of each post are, of course, the Post Content and Comments area.  In this area, all communication between the post author and readers takes place, serving nearly ninety percent of the purpose of a blog.

What I didn’t mention in depth are the comments and trackbacks (links back to the post from others) area, which may be split, depending on your theme and/or blog system.  These areas generally represent some of the similar elements that the main post does - a comment Gravatar (image representing the commenter, link/name of responder, time they published the comment, and finally, the comment, or short excerpt if it is in the form of a trackback.

Final Thoughts

Now, any blog can contain many more areas than those listed - social bookmarking links, commenting plugins (like SezWho, shown above), or other features, which may add up to a more bloated commenting process for readers.  

In either instance, whether you prefer a straightforward experience for your readers or one that adds plugins and tools to extend your post into other networks, the post and comments area hold enormous significance on your blog.

As a basic introduction to the post area for beginners, hopefully this post has aided you.

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What Do You Regret as a Blogger?

Categories: Blogging

Everyone makes mistakes, some more than others, but it is all human nature - no one is perfect.  When you chose to start a blog, you likely figured that it wouldn’t be as much work as others made it out to be, that you would quickly rise to fame and churn out those posts on a daily basis.  While this isn’t my first blog, I did make some mistakes that I regret to this day.

Finding the time to blog is one of the most overused excuses bloggers write on their blogs, and may either means that they really don’t have the time, which in most cases, means that there are other events that take precedence over the task of blogging, or they have found that blogging isn’t the right thing for them to do, and they have called it quits.

I believe that I asked this question before, but I would like to reopen it again with further discussion, after all, quite some time has passed.

One of the biggest problems I faced when I started this blog was not taking it in the right direction.  While I had planned extensively before creating the blog, I didn’t think about what visitors were really looking for, and therefore didn’t produce enough content in the initial three months or so, leading to a total of only three to six posts by the time December and January rolled around (blog was started in mid-October).

While I have (for the most part) been able to recover from that costly mistake on my part, what mistakes have you made in the process of starting a blog?

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5 Ways to Distribute Wealth Back to Readers

Categories: Blogging

“Wealth” is a term that is thrown out a lot, especially during harder times.  It is a term that can have completely opposite meanings depending on who you talk to and the situation that they are in.  To the wealthy, it typically means having a lot of money and material possessions, while to the poor and needy, it may mean that they are able to purchase enough food for on the table.

Thinking about the way bloggers approach others and help (or hinder) the efforts of others, it is important to remember that to a degree, everyone is equal, and no blogger truly deserves to preside over others; nearly everyone has common goals, whether that may be to make money or simply provide an outlet for spreading their thoughts.

With the advent of social networking and other services, which have helped contribute to the growth of blogging both as a hobby and profession.  Today, communication between people through the social media sites (Twitter and Facebook, and StumbleUpon, to name just a few) has led to new advantages in blogging networks, as well as made the process of connecting to others for the purpose of blogging easier.

However, like in society, “social” classes have formed in the blogosphere - bloggers that don’t have much content/little revenue/few followers, up to those that make six figures a year with thousands of readers and content that dates back several years.  In most cases, these bloggers “stay” in their “sphere” and tend to only associate themselves (while I would likely do the same) with people they know are trustworthy and will only help advance and grow their blog, distributing traffic among each other.

There are a few ways you can curb this trend, while it won’t be to a large scale.  You can give back your earnings to your most devoted readers, gain traffic, and produce a win-win situation for you and the visitors that frequent your site.

  1. Run promotions or contents that reward members for commenting.  You can put a percentage of your blog’s earnings or request sponsors for the contest, and offer an equal opportunity for all to get a chance to enter the promotion (spread over a month, make it simple to complete, etc.).
  2. Join social networking sites so others can stay updated with new content that you produce, which will also allow you to grow from a small-time blogger to the path of an A-lister.   Even if you haven’t established a connection with people beforehand, it can be useful to create blog-only accounts to keep your blog and personal contacts separate.
  3. Integrate tools into your site, ranging from social networking icons and MyBlogLog-type widgets, which help readers further connect with you and your site.  These can add value to your blog if used sparingly, and makes it easier for your content to be distributed (in good ways, of course) throughout the web.
  4. Reward frequent commentators by placing “Most Commented” sidebar areas and be sure to respond/feature their posts in some way more often than people who have only commented once or twice.  These people have helped build your blog, so you are doing a disfavor to them if you do not reward them in the end.
  5. Finally, make your voice heard that you appreciate the frequent visitors by providing an alternative or subscribers-only newsletter, which helps build an “insider” audience, further helping promote your blog (as you can promote your RSS feed by saying “Subscribe to receive exclusive posts”).
Keeping these ideas in mind, find ways to reward frequent commentators and people that have “Stumbled” or “Dugg” your posts.  It may cost you some time and cash right now, but in the end, the community that you intended to build will be much stronger, and you will reap in profits and benefits that far outweighed any efforts you put in to date.
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