Great post titles give great reader figures
As you sit down and write the next post on your business blog, you’ll no doubt have a clear idea of what you want to communicate and hopefully how you want to do it. Nevertheless, unless you can entice people to read this latest offering, then all your hard work will be in vain, so take care with the title you use for the post as it plays a key role in that process.
Why are Post Titles important?
Well, they’re important in the same way that a newspaper headline is – they attract our attention, offer an insight or a “teaser” as to what the post contains and hopefully encourage us to read the full article. With the huge amount of information that we have nowadays, it is so important to grab people’s attention 
| Article Categories: | Blog Marketing Tips, Marketing your Blog, SEO for Blogs, Writing your Blog |
| Article Tags: | Business Blogs, CopyBlogger, Headlines, Search Engines, SEO Blogs, Title Tags, Writing a Blog, Writing blog posts |
How to stop comment spam on your Blog
It seems that no matter what new online communication tools we come up with, there are going to be those who want to abuse them. We are all aware of the way in which Email has revolutionised how we communicate (and the genuine commercial opportunities it offers) but also the way in which it has been blighted over recent years by email spam.
Likewise, blogs are open to abuse from individuals looking to exploit them at the expense of others, the preferred ways being Spam Blogs and Comment Spam. So let’s see why Comment Spam exists and how we can go about stopping it on our blogs.
What is Comment Spam?
Comment Spam is where a spammer leaves comments on blog posts that have nothing to do with the post itself but merely contain multiple links back to the spammer’s commercial website. Most Comment Spam is now carried out automatically rather than by individuals and its goal is generally just to create links back to a target site (and so improve its Search Engine ranking), though it may also attract a small amount of traffic as well.
If my Comment Spam filter is at all representative, then the subject matter will be familiar to all of us using email, since the same types of subjects and messages tend to crop up in both.
How do we stop Comment Spam on our own blog?
So what are our options when it comes to avoiding having comment spam swamping our blogs, other than turning off comments all together of course – and that’s something I’m certainly not advocating!
- Comment Moderation
The most time consuming way is simply to moderate out all of the spam comments – that is to say, you look at each comment which has been left and allow genuine ones to appear on your blog while deleting the spam comments. This can become very time consuming (not to mention frustrating!) because once you are “found” by the spam commenters, you are going to be receiving a lot of these. Rule of thumb – the more successful you are, the easier you are to find and the more you will receive – I imagine with such a high profile blog, Darren Rowse over at ProBlogger suffers more than most, as he comments here. - CAPTCHA methods
CAPTCHA is actually an acronym (ok, since you asked – Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart – there, now wasn’t that interesting!) but you’ll know it as a distorted series of letters and numbers which appear on the page and that you have to type in. This is designed to prove that you are a human and not an automated visitor – or, in this case, spammer. Typed in correctly, it allows you to submit your comment, but will stop most forms of automated comment spam getting through. - Specialist Software Intervention
Just like with email, there are also providers of specialist software which can help us and here, in my opinion, the leader in this respect is called Akismet. Here, the software identifies the comments that it believes are spam and impounds them – it’s also provided free of charge, except for commercial use, which is an additional bonus. Although it was developed by the company involved with Wordpress, it has been modified to work with many other types of blog software so it’s worth checking out. Another plug-in for Wordpress is Spam Karma which also comes highly recommended. - Getting commenters to log-in
You can of course elect to only accept comments from people that have already logged in to a registration system which you run on your blog – this way you can be fairly sure that they will be leaving real comments because you have effectively “pre-vetted” them.
Which method is the best?
All of the methods above work well from a functional level and will help to avoid the vast majority of comment spam from arriving in your posts. Therefore, when deciding which method to use, I was personally swayed by the impact that it would have on readers wanting to leave genuine comments. Basically, I wanted to make sure that it was as easy as possible for them to do so.
Therefore, I elected to go down the specialist software route which has no impact on readers leaving comments and nothing additional for them to do – I therefore use Akismet on my blogs and those that I set-up for the businesses and individuals I work with. The results? Well, so far so good. It stops 95% of spam and also learns from all the blogs using it, so keeps up with (if not stays ahead of) the comment spammers and their methods. Overall, a big thumbs up from me.
BTW – to make sure that you have all the information at your finger tips to make your own decision, no matter which blog platform you use, I’ll be doing a second post on the subject of comment spam next week where I will try to lay out the different options available for each platform. In the meantime, any thoughts you’d like to share on what has worked for you, then please leave a comment – a real one preferably!
| Article Categories: | Blogging Strategy, Business Blog Design, Business Blogging, Corporate Blogging, Writing your Blog |
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Generating yet more ideas for your Business Blog
Following on from my post earlier in the week on Generating ideas for your Business Blog Posts, I thought that I’d follow it up with some more specific ideas on how you can keep up a flow of ideas for the next posts on your Blog – after all, there are always going to be moments when we struggle to know what we can post while still ensuring that we keep the quality and the focus.
Anyway, here are some of the ones that I tend to use.
Write about current events
Something that you probably do on an ongoing basis is keeping an eye on what is being written about your industry, perhaps through various news media and ideally with the help of 
| Article Categories: | Ask the Blog Coach, Blogging Basics, Business Blogging, Corporate Blogging, Writing your Blog |
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Linking to other blogs: business benefits
Linking is part and parcel of blogging … and it’s an important part of it as well. The blogosphere thrives on links & connections and those blogs which create those outbound links will tend to thrive with it.
Put simply, linking out is good – good for your blog and good for your business.
As you link to others, you strengthen your own position. Partly because you are validating and supporting the content of your posts but also because you are developing a repository of information which will benefit the readers who are attracted to your blog.
In fact, there are lots of positive reasons for linking to other blogs and sites which I tend to categorise as follows:
Informing your readers and Supporting your posts
Links are probably the sincerest way of recommending other blogs as valuable sources of information – you are effectively giving them a big thumbs up. Equally, they are an important way of providing reference sources to support and corroborate the arguments or assertions you are making in your own posts.
Business & Blog Promotion
By linking out, you will also be spreading the word about your own blog. If you use trackbacks to the sites you link to, then you’ll appear in the comments section of the post you’re referring to, giving more people the chance to find your blog. Owners of blogs are also generally interested in who’s referencing them, so you’ll often get a visit from them, and hopefully they’ll like what they find!
Developing Reputation and Creating Value
You will get more readers using your blog as the start point for their research, primarily because they trust the information and the links that you provide – effectively, in your area of specialism, you act as their online directory and general resource. For them, you become THE person to go to.
Creating Community & Networking
By linking to other sources, you are creating a mini resource in your area of expertise – this in turn can start to generate a community or network of readers using it with you and your blog at its centre. The links you provide help your readers to learn more about the subject and direct them to discussions going on elsewhere. Essentially your blog becomes the place where your readers know they can get up to date information on issues that they consider to be important.
Two good posts on the subject and, just to prove that it works, I found one through a link posted in the other:
Kevin Keefe writing on Lexblog gives a clear example and some no nonsense commentary of why linking to competitors is smart from his perspective in the Legal blogging arena. However, the lessons he outlines are equally relevant in any business sector.
Brian Clark at Copyblogger picks up on this in Why Linking to other blogs is essential and extends the argument slightly further. I tend to prefer Brian’s use of the word “essential” rather than just “smart” to describe linking (though both are valid) but either way the message is the same. Linking out is good for your blog and good for your business.
| Article Categories: | Blog Marketing Tips, Blogging Strategy, Business Blogging, Writing your Blog |
| Article Tags: | Blawg, Blog marketing, Blogosphere, Business Blogs, CopyBlogger, Corporate Blogs, LexBlog, Linking Blogs |
Generating Ideas for your Business Blog posts
In the early stages of writing their business blog, I find that a lot of people often worry about how they will find topics to write about. Don’t! I can guarantee that this will not be a problem. You know your subject inside out (or else the likelihood is that you wouldn’t be writing about it) and so you’ll find your main task will be picking the right topics for your readers.
For me, there are two main sources of ideas: you and everyone else.
Blog Post Ideas – You
You want to make sure that you capture all the ideas that come to you and personally I use a nice and easy solution for this: 
| Article Categories: | Ask the Blog Coach, Blogging Basics, Corporate Blogging, Writing your Blog |
| Article Tags: | Blog idea generation, Business Blogs, Corporate Blog Topics, Creating ideas, Writing blog posts |
