25 business blogging tips from a 10-year-old

Business blogging is easy with these tips from a 10-year-oldNo more excuses about why you aren’t blogging for your business.

If 10-year-old Tyler Duswalt can start and maintain a blog, so can you.

Tyler is author of The Short Book on How to Become a Blogging Expert—A 10-Year-Old’s Top 25 Easy Tips to Help You Start an Effective Blog (Craig Duswalt International, $9.95).

He published it last year, after his blog, CPCheats, became a go-to source for kids who wanted to cheat at Club Penguin. The online role-playing game, published by Disney Online Studios, involves a virtual world containing a range of online games and activities.  Players use cartoon penguin-avatars and play in a winter-set virtual world.

One of the criticisms of the game is that it allows players to cheat. Hence, Tyler’s blog which has had more than 85,000 views.

I learned about Tyler recently when I spoke at Author U in Denver and met his dad, Craig Duswalt, who also was on the program and taught authors about how to market like a rock star.

Craig says Tyler wrote the book himself. No professional editors. No book coaches. No picky proofreaders. Just sage advice from a 10-year old blogging expert who use phrases like “And that’s all I have to say about that” at the end of a chapter.

Here are some of the questions that people typically ask about blogging, and Tyler’s responses, excerpted from the book:

Q.  How many times should you post to your blog?

A.  ”As much as you can every week. Try to post at least once a day. I post about three times a day…But here is one thing not to do: do NOT Blog if you know you won’t have enough time to make posts. It’s useless.”

Q.  How can you get traffic to a blog?

A.  ”One way to get more hits is to Comment on other blogs and typing in your blog’s domain name at the end of your comment.”

Q.  What’s the very best way to get traffic?

A.  ”Contests! You can make a POST for a contest that will go on for a certain amount of time. I had one before. I used to play an online game called Club Penguin (Disney MMO game) and I bought a gift card for a membership. Then I had a contest where if you commented on my blog you would get entered in a drawing. Very fun. I got 1,000 hits in one day because of that contest.”

Q.  What does a blogger need to do so that the search engines can find a blog post?

A.  ”When finished with a post, and before publishing it, go to the area that says tags, and type in a few things that will get people to find you on the search eninges.”

Q.  How do you sell products on a blog?

A. “All you need to do is to set up a lnk to the website where you want to sell the thing that you are selling. For example, your post might look like this:

TITLE: Buy my product!

POST: Hello! I just bought a T-shirt and was wondering if you guys want to buy  it. If you want it, click the link: http://ebay.com/pinktshirt

Tyler also covers polls, how to post photos and audio, how to add pages,  copyright, video/picture galleries, widgets, blogrolls and more.

He doesn’t blog anymore because he doesn’t play Club Penguin. But his tips are perfect for anyone who wants a quick overview of what’s possible with a blog.

Yes, it’s a lot of work. But as Tyler explains in the Bonus Tip on the last page of his book:

“Have Fun With Your Blog! Well, this is the end of the book. I hope you enjoyed these easy tips, and I wish you luck on your blog.”

Convinced? Ready to start your own blog? See “Time-saving Tips for Smart Business Blogging,” a grown-up’s guide to blogging. It comes with 23 pages of handouts that include 101 ways to find content for your blog, and tips for writing better and faster.

Hear my business blogging tips Feb. 16 in Milwaukee

BLOG spelled out on a blue keyboardIf you live in southeastern Wisconsin and you still aren’t blogging, or you need some ideas to kick-start your blog that isn’t attracting much attention, don’t miss this one.
  
Join me at the Feb. 16 luncheon meeting of FOCUS, a networking organization for women business owners, management executives and professionals in Ozaukee County.

I’m the guest speaker, and I’ll discuss “How to Blog for Business–Even if You’re a Techno-Idiot, Can’t Write and Can’t Think of Anything to Say.”

Far too many business owners don’t blog because they think they don’t have time, they’re frightened by the technology or they don’t realize that they have valuable information to share with their target audiences. I’ll demonstrate how to create a blog in 10 minutes or less, for free, even if you’re a techno-idiot.
  
I’ll also give you 24 ideas on how to find content, and I’ll share a half dozen shortcuts on how to write and blog posts quickly. (You don’t have to start from scratch and you don’t have to do it all yourself.)
  
Come with questions!  After this session, you’ll be able to create your own blog, publish your first post and start pulling traffic that same day. Here are the details:
  
When: 11:30 a.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 16
  
Where: Ozaukee Country Club, 10823 N. River Road, Mequon
  
Cost: $17
  
To Register: Send an email before Friday, Feb. 11, at noon so they know you’re coming. Pay by check or cash, at the door, when you check in. Cancellations must be made by noon, Monday, Feb. 14.
  
Sorry, no walk-ins.  I hope to see an audience of Publicity Hounds!

7 ways blogging makes you and your employees smarter

dog in front of green blackboardBy now, you’ve probably read most of the arguments on why companies should be blogging.

But here’s one you don’t read about very much.

Blogging makes you smarter. And that goes for your employees, too, if they’re posting to your blog.

Almost every time I write here,  I do research, even if it’s simply Googling the topic I want to write about. That usually leads me to a few websites I check out before I start to write.

Other simple research includes double-checking names, searching for the exact definition of words if I’m unsure of their meaning, and reading other bloggers’ posts if they’ve written about my topic.
   
  
What blogging forces you to do

Here are 7 other ways blogging can make you and your employees smarter (use this for ammo with your boss):

  1. Good bloggers know they are accountable for what they write. So they check and double-check facts until they’re confident that what they’ve written is correct. I learned this the hard way when I was sued for defamation
        
  2. Linking to outside resources from your blog is a valuable service to readers. But you can’t link to garbage. You have to find quality content. That takes time. During your search, you can stumble onto other meaty topics that are also worthy of blog posts—and learn a few new facts along the way.
        
  3. Employees who are well trained in business blogging will repeatedly communicate to readers the company’s key message. And they won’t forget it. 
       
    One of my corporate clients, who will be recruiting a group of employees to post to the company’s new blog that I’m helping them create, asked about how to make the blog posts cohesive. Easy. Make sure everyone in the company, not just the bloggers, understands the company’s key message and incorporates it into their posts.  Each blogger can write in his or her own voice. That will make the blog more interesting. But the message should be consistent.     
      
  4. Blogging is a smart way for writers to learn about other departments within the company, and vendors too.  If you work in customer service and blog about what’s happening in your department, you may not give a hoot about the vendor that prints the paper bags in your bricks-and-mortar stores, until somebody calls you to complain that the ink from the bag bled onto her white skirt when she was walking in the rain.  If you’re writing about how your company will solve that problem, you’ll most likely be calling the vendor to see if they can use a different type of ink.
     
  5. You’ll learn a lot from people who leave comments at your blog, including people who complain about your products and services. Even though this post lists six ways blogging makes you smarter, I’m betting somebody will comment and add one more reason to my list. Or, perhaps, a complaint. Better they list it here than someplace else.
       
  6. Really good bloggers respond to comments. For me, that sometimes means even more research. It’s also means, occasionally, admitting I was wrong when somebody points out something dumb that I said.
      
  7. You’ll know what other people are saying about you when they link to your blog posts. You can then comment at their blogs, mention your expertise, and get a backlink to your corporate blog, thus driving more traffic.


How has blogging made you smarter?

What about you? How has blogging made you or employees within your company smarter?

Does your company give employees the time to research topics?  Do you encourage employees to go outside the company to find information? Have you found any super-helpful online research tools?

Commenting at blogs? Mention your expertise

Colorful images of peg figures of people with talk bubbles coming out of their mouthsMickie Kennedy’s excellent post Blog commenting for PR–do’s and dont’s, reminded me about something that every smart Publicity Hound do. 

State your expertise whenever you comment.

For example, if I’m commenting on a post about how to write well, I’ll start by saying…”As a publicity expert who worked as a newspaper writing coach for many years, I disagree with….”

Here are ways to state your expertise:

  • Have you written a book on the topic?  If so, say so.
      
  • Are you a speaker or trainer?
        
  • Are you a consultant?
       
  • Have you written more than two dozen articles on the topic?
      
  • Do you have a Facebook Fan page devoted to this topic and does it have a large number of fans? (Be sure to link.) 

Mentioning this just might tempt people to click the link.

When Patsi Krakoff was my guest expert on the webinar “Time-saving Tips for Smart Business Blogging,” she mentioned the value of comments, especially for people who don’t yet have blogs. I spend as much time as possible commenting at other people’s blogs. In a few instances, the bloggers have liked the comments so much that they extended an invitation to me to be a guest blogger.

How much time  do you spend comnmenting at blogs? Have you seen a good return on your investment of time? If so, what has happened as a result?