This week in the lecture there were some very surprising results which were put to the class:
Your blogs (66 enrolled)
– 17 enrolled but no blog URL provided (26%)
– 31 blogs look inactive (only 1 or 2 posts) (47%)
– 18 blogs tracking well (27%)
The results above at this stage mean that 73% of students who have enrolled (INB346 – Enterprise 2.0 @ QUT) are in trouble at this stage and there was a bit of discussion on this before the lecture started.
In reply to the discussion I thought I would post some of my opinions and some hurdles I’ve come across. Tips to get your site out that and hopefully get you in the right direction. I’ll keep it fairly generic so this can be applied in other areas, in other situations.
Site platform: What to use for your website? Is it free? Should I get hosting? What about a domain name?
There are a lot of choices out there. Perhaps that can be a bit of a problem. I decided before looking what to use I was going to buy a domain and host the site on the web. To purchase the domain I went to www.godaddy.com entered in a few details and there it was. I already had hosting organised, so it was fairly easy for me to point the domain to the correct name servers and other stuff.
My next choice was to pick what software to use. Open Source, stable and already established. I could quickly short list this to: Joomla, Drupal, WordPress, Blogger, Mambo. As I knew Blogger was owned by Google and didn’t really allow full control I crossed that out. Mambo was a fork of Joomla made a year or so ago and Joomla itself did a fair bit more than blogging so I took that off the list. That left Drupal and WordPress. WordPresshad a great write up and had both hosted solution (of their domain) and a version you could download and host yourself so I gave that a try (and stuck with it).
Once I had purchased the domain and installed WordPress. My main goal was to make my site searchable. Now that it was on the web, getting it on the search engines was the next challenge. This brings me to the second hurdle.
Content: Remove standard content, writing posts, integrating twitter, categories, tags
Removing the standard content such as “hello world”, the standard links and all that for me was a must. I didn’t want Google searching my site and identifying it as a generic installation that is going no where. I didn’t want to “give the wrong impression” and get black listed as such. I quickly changed the about me page, knowing that this can be changed later. I wrote up a first post (and edited it a few times after it was published) and I was on my way.
So how do I pick what to write about? I attend the lecture and listen to Jason Watson talk and if I get some thoughts going on a particular topic I wrote some points down. I look at the workshop activities and take things from there. Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0 concepts are everywhere, and we interact with them daily. I know some students voiced that they didn’t want to get shot down in case the said something wrong. Instead I think of it is an opportunity to voice what I know where someone else can agree, disagree or even provide feedback to further my knowledge (best case scenario).
Categories and Tags. To be honest this is something that I might not have done the best at this stage, but one thing I make sure I do with every post is to make sure I put it in a category, and I tag it with key words which summaries the post. This way you can find that article by looking in a specific category or specific tag. Having more ways to find your content, and search for it isn’t going to hurt.
Integrating twitter – well first I had to join which was easy, and the next step was getting my updates to display on the site. This took a bit of searching around but in the end I decided to go with a plugin called ‘WordPress’. It does what it says, and after installation it was very easy to set it up as a widget on the side of my site.
Web Presence: How am I increasing my web presence? How to give yourself feedback?
One of my main goals is getting a web presence and the site on to google.com and very high up there in the rankings when you search for my name. I believe this is achievable so I’m going to achieve it…. and I’m monitoring my progress so I know if I’m getting closer or further away. This is one thing which I set up from the start with my Have you googled your name? post and have followed up on it later with a Web Presence Update post. This is a way of personal feedback and I way to assess how your blog is going. If you get the feeling of movement and progress you might find you get a bit of snowballing effect. I also have stats running on my site “called AwStats” in the back end which monitors who visits the site, time of the day, what pages have been viewed, etc which allows me to judge where I’ve gone right or wrong. This is how I found out that my Negative Web Presence Example – Abbey Sherwell post was suck up by Google and spat out in the search results.
Exposure: How will Google find my site? How will my search engine ranking increase? Comments? Pings? Trackbacks?
Very similar to my last hurdle, but I thought I would break it up.
So how do you get your site on Google? I bet most of you haven’t thought about actually telling Google have you?
Other: Something I’ve missed? Forgotten? What about comments?
Well these were some of the first hurdles I’ve had, and I think this is what other will come across too. One thing mentioned in the lecture was comments. We all like comments and like to here feedback (I know I do) but this shouldn’t be a crucial aspect of your site. Think of it as a bonus if you get any. We also have a fair amount of students in this subject, so once you get the ball rolling have a look on other students site and leave a comment. If you receive a comment, try and return the favour. If I’m going to comment, I try and add extra value to the original post which I would like to recommend my readers in doing.
Outro:
There are plenty of tips, how to’s, screenshots, guides, tutorials, posts and resources on the net to help you get started. I’ve only touched on on a few things here but if you feel like there was something I’ve missed let me know and I can update the post. Also if you are struggling to get started let me know and I might be able to assist (or point you in the right direction).
7 Responses to Your blog – Getting over the first hurdles
Ways I promote my blogs - Behind Glass Walls
August 16th, 2009 at 8:50 am
[...] share some of the methods I’ve found for promoting my blog. This was prompted by reading this article by Jason Van Dyke. I’ve had experience in setting up other blogs, and through that I’ve [...]
Birgit Hapfelmeier
August 17th, 2009 at 5:47 pm
Dear Jason,
thank you for your recommendations how to make my blog successfully. Currently I am trying to write about examples of Enterprises using Web 2.0 technologies. f you have any examples I would be happy if you write me a comment.
All the best
Birgit
pAUL mATHIESEN
August 19th, 2009 at 11:27 am
Hey Jason, thanks for the tips on promoting my blog. Currently I am on the first few pages of Google but can’t get spot #1. I’ll have to work on that
~ Paul.
Brendan Read
August 19th, 2009 at 10:58 pm
Thanks Jason, you have really put some effort in assisting everyone.
Ben McCallum
August 20th, 2009 at 8:50 pm
Hey Jason,
Thanks for the tips, I’ve been on the right track but there were a few good tips in there I hadn’t thought of. Such as, adding my URL to Google and Bing search engines. I didn’t even know that was possible. My blog was already coming up via searches but it was interesting nonetheless.
-Cheers,
Ben
Jason
August 24th, 2009 at 10:38 pm
Glad to hear that it might of helped a few of you. It will be great to see some more blogs out there.
Nohaalharbi
August 25th, 2009 at 3:59 pm
Thank you so much for the tips Jason
regards,
Noha