Monday, November 30, 2009

Dude, Tell Me Something I Don’t Know!

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Have you ever been in a friendly discussion with someone who kept repeating things you already knew over and over again? I am sure you have, and it is freaking annoying. You get that urge to say "Dude, tell me something I don't know!".

I had such an experience this weekend, and I realized that the same principle can be applied to blogging (and to online marketing as a whole). In other words, you need to tell your audience (be they blog readers or prospects of your company) something that they don't know. If you keep repeating trivial stuff, or stuff that other bloggers and companies have already discussed far and wide, you will bore the heck out of everyone.

I am guilty of regurgitating stuff myself, and I know how hard it is to come up with new and interesting things all the time. But hey, that is what is going to make a difference, so we might as well strive for it.

The next time you are about to hit "Publish," evaluate whether or not your audience will read it and get the urge to say "Dude, tell me something I don't know!".


Original Post: Dude, Tell Me Something I Don't Know!


Daniel Scocco 30 Nov, 2009


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Sunday, November 29, 2009

Christmas gifts for nerds - part one?

Christmas gifts for nerds - part one?

1. Red Shirt Cologne
2. Tauntaun Sleeping Bag
3. Wonder Twins Costume Shirts Zan and Jayna
4. Live Long and Prosper Stadium Hand
5. Light Saber Chopsticks

noreply@blogger.com (My Daily List) Sat, 28 Nov 2009 23:05:00 +0000

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My 10 favorite COPS characters

My 10 favorite COPS characters

1. Casual guy without shirt
2. Girl who didn't know her boyfriend had crack in the car
3. Odd looking hooker who turns out to be a dude
4. Guy with baggy pants who can't run very well
5. Computer tech cruising for meth
6. Fleeing driver who crashes into a tree
7. Stoned girl without a drivers license
8. Guy who acts tough until the police dogs arrive
9. Naked traffic stop person
10. Bad boys bad boys

noreply@blogger.com (My Daily List) Mon, 30 Nov 2009 00:25:00 +0000

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Friday, November 27, 2009

What Is Your Secret Weapon for Succeeding Online?

What Is Your Secret Weapon for Succeeding Online?

questions and answersThis post is part of the Friday Q&A section. Just use the contact form if you want to submit a question.

Wahyu asks:

I am so glad that I've found this valuable blog. After reading it, I've got so many lesson about SEO. I am already practicing a few tips from you, but why I still don't have link popularity from Google. Please tell me your secret weapon just for me, please. Because I saw your blog had a huge number of Google link popularity. I need your help so much.

I get similar emails pretty much every week. Sometimes they ask about getting Google traffic, other times about making money with their websites. Overall it is always the same thing, though. Someone who wants to know what is my "secret weapon," my "special and secret strategies" and my "most effective tricks" to succeed online. I decided to finally reveal everything, so from now on I will just send the link to this post to people who send those emails.

So here we go. My secret, ultimate and bombastic weapon for succeeding in pretty much every endeavor is… drum roll please… believing that there are no secret weapons, hidden tricks or shortcuts.

There, I said it.

If there are no secret weapons, hidden tricks and shortcuts, what does it take to achieve success? Two things, basically: hard work and persistence.

And that is why having this belief is a secret weapon in itself. Because it forces me to get off my butt every single morning and work hard. It also gives me the motivation and energy to keep working hard over the long term, because I know that if I persist, eventually I will achieve my goals. In fact I don't consider myself that successful yet, but I am sure I will arrive there.

Obviously there are many more factors involved. You need to study and master your trade. You need to develop the right set of skills. You need to network with the right people. But hey, if you are willing to work hard and persist I am taking for granted that you will also have all those complementary factors.

That is my opinion, at least. Feel free to share yours on a comment.


Original Post: What Is Your Secret Weapon for Succeeding Online?


Daniel Scocco Fri, 27 Nov 2009 16:11:15 +0000

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5 ways to burn extra Thanksgiving calories

5 ways to burn extra Thanksgiving calories

1. Snoring
2. Making turkey sandwiches
3. Burping
4. The Deuce
5. Squabbling

noreply@blogger.com (My Daily List) Fri, 27 Nov 2009 03:39:00 +0000

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10 Things to Be Grateful For

10 Things to Be Grateful For

image of a turkey dinner

I'll admit it. I have a soft spot for Thanksgiving.

First, because it's an excuse for me to bake for three days. (If you need a last-minute recipe for the world's best chocolate cream pie, I've got you covered.)

And second, because it reminds me to quit grumbling and start noticing all of the amazing stuff I've got in my life.

Here's my list of 10 things I would humbly recommend you add to your own "gratitude list" this year. They've done great things for my business and I think they'll do great things for yours.

1. The crummy economy

I know, this seems weird. I'm not discounting the very serious and significant problems this has created for millions of people. One of whom might well be you.

But in cracking open the existing systems and shaking them like an ant farm, the horrible economy has also created some amazing opportunities.

If you think of the big companies as dinosaurs who've just been hit between the eyes with a gigantic meteor, remember that you're the smart, agile, adaptable monkey who's going to inherit the earth.

Frankly, the economy is going to suck for awhile no matter how you feel about it. So you might as well look for the angles that can benefit you.

2. The social web

Brian's not a fan of this term, since of course everything about the web has always been social. It was built by humans, after all.

But there's no question that a revolution in communication technology lets you be social with more people, more easily, over incredible geographic and cultural distances, with less friction than ever before.

Which means you can get the word out about what you do for hardly any money, with no special technical ability, to tens of thousands or even millions of people.

And that's just cool.

3. The quality of free information

Stewart Brand didn't just say "information wants to be free." He also said, "information wants to be expensive, because it's so valuable."

What this boils down to is that a lot of smart people have put together great tips, techniques, and help for you to do just about anything. Very often, they start by selling that information at a hefty price tag, to those for whom it's most valuable.

Then some time goes by, they keep developing their stuff, and they "move the free line" by giving away tremendously valuable information for free.

Yes, the free goodies take time to sift through. Yes, there's a whole lot of junk.

But if you're bootstrapping your project, you can spend a little more time and energy and find the answers you want.

Because the current ethos is "give away incredibly valuable stuff for free to build trust and rapport," you can benefit from that.

You have to choose wisely, of course. Don't spend your time watching or reading anything from people you don't respect or relate to. But if you stick with the people your gut tells you are right for you, you can learn amazing things without spending a dime.

4. The quality of paid information

Because there's so much excellent free material out there, it means that for people who are creating paid information products (membership sites, ebooks, home study courses, etc.), their stuff has to be top notch.

So when you find yourself crossing that line where you've got some spare money but not much spare time, you have increasingly excellent opportunities to educate yourself online.

It doesn't matter whether you're learning to fly fish, climb the corporate ladder, design gardens, potty train your kid, be a happier person, or even (yes) market your business online, there are terrific resources that will teach you to do that for a very reasonable fee. And you can access these courses from virtually anywhere on earth.

5. Twitter search

Companies have taken hundreds of millions of dollars in VC funding to build tools that "listen in" to the conversations buzzing around the Internet.

That's fine, but you can do an amazing job of this for free by signing up for a Twitter account.

Too many people think Twitter is mostly about telling people what kind of sandwich they're having for lunch today. But for smart business people, Twitter is mostly about listening.

Search Twitter for the kinds of phrases your customers tend to talk about. Maybe it's low-carb dessert recipes or finding a karate school for their kids.

You'll find out what they're saying, what kind of language they use to talk about it, what bugs them and what delights them.

These are staggeringly useful things to know when you're trying to market a product or service. And you can get it by spending maybe 6 or 7 minutes a day, for free.

6. Connections with incredible people

Whatever it is you like to blog or write about, there are amazingly cool people who like to blog and write about that, too.

They're posting wonderful articles and interesting perspectives and asking fascinating questions. And you can get to know them just by writing about their stuff (with a link, of course), posting reasonably intelligent comments on their blog, and following them on Twitter.

The smart, funny, snarky, interesting, kind, and entirely wonderful people I've met by blogging have blown me away. And I'm always finding new folks. (That was true before I started writing for a "big blog," by the way. In fact, it's how I started writing for a big blog.)

7. Aweber

Aweber (www.aweber.com) is my email newsletter management tool. They do a great job getting mail into in-boxes (mostly because they hate spammers even worse than you do). They have useful tools, a fantastic how-to blog, an easy-to-understand interface, and I can't recommend them highly enough.

A great email autoresponder sequence is my single favorite marketing tool (above a blog, even), and Aweber is the tool I think is best for the job.

8. Backpack

37Signals is another company I think is terrific, and I would be toast without their Backpack product.

Backpack keeps everything I do in one spot. Half-written blog posts, GTD lists, my calendar, reference notes for client projects, wild-hair ideas for new ventures, gardening plans, checklists for things I'm building, even backups of the million ebooks and audio education products I buy.

For me, they have the exact right combination of flexibility and simplicity, at an excellent price. If it doesn't fit into my Backpack, I can probably live without it.

9. My copywriting library

A lot of those "secrets of the internet money-getting zillionaires" came from books you can buy for $12 on Amazon.

You can't make money unless you can persuade someone to pay attention to what you've got, and then build a case for its value. That's copywriting. (It's even copywriting if you're doing it with video.)

Classics like Scientific Advertising and Tested Advertising Methods are joined by newer giants like Robert Cialdini's Influence and Seth Godin's Permission Marketing, and a handful of great web-based references like Gary Bencivenga's Marketing Bullets.

Learning to write great persuasive copy is mostly a matter of studying the techniques (which don't change much, because human nature doesn't change) and then trying them out. There's no "push button" service that will magically do it for you. But the truth is, it's well within your ability. You just have to get out there and start trying it.

10. The Third Tribe

This was an idea that bubbled up on Copyblogger back in February, after we were asked the question "Whose side are you on?"

Brian and I talked about this question quite a bit, and realized that we definitely weren't on the strict yellow-highlighter-squeeze-page side. But we weren't on the "blog for 20 years before you dare to ask anyone for the sale" side either.

So we made up a third side. :)

Actually, it had been there all along, going back four years to when Brian first created this blog. But once you have a label, you find that you start to articulate what you're doing more clearly.

That led directly to the brand-new Copyblogger email newsletter, which kicks off with a 20-part course on how to be an ethical, non-sleazy, relationship-based kumbaya blogger and still make a very nice living. If that sounds like something that would interest you, you can learn more about the newsletter here.

What's on your list?

What are you grateful for this year? What do you think other readers would be grateful for if they knew more about it? Let us know in the comments.

About the Author: Sonia Simone is Senior Editor of Copyblogger and the founder of Remarkable Communication.


Thesis Theme for WordPress

Sonia Simone Thu, 26 Nov 2009 16:35:09 +0000

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Does Speech Recognition Software Really Work?

Does Speech Recognition Software Really Work?

image of a hands-free headset

One of my favorite posts from around the web last week came from our own Associate Editor Jon Morrow. He recorded a 20-minute video post for Problogger about how he works with speech recognition software to do all of his blogging.

I do an awful lot of writing every week, and I've been thinking about trying speech recognition out in order to speed up the process. But like most people, I was afraid it was going to be more trouble than it was worth to get it working.

Jon's video made me realize how simple (and inexpensive) it will be for me to make it happen.

Because it was a pretty content-rich video, a lot of folks took a quick look and bookmarked it, thinking to come back to it when they had a little more time. So what better way to spend the Friday-after-a-holiday than eating leftover turkey sandwiches and watching a great how-to post?

(If you're not in the States, you can re-create the effect by overeating wildly today or tonight, drinking just a little too much, pounding down four desserts, having three arguments with your extended family, and then watching the video tomorrow.)

The highlights of the video for me were:

  • The quick-to-install (and cheap) piece of hardware that lets the software actually understand what you're saying.
  • Jon on video! Jon and I have spent a lot of time on the phone, so I've gotten to know him fairly well. Getting to hang out with him for a few minutes via video was great, he's a fascinating guy with a lot to say. (The guy can say more with his eyebrows than most people can with a 100-item list post.)
  • The one-stop resource to find the right mic and hardware for your setup.
  • The live demo showing exactly how Jon uses the software to manage his business and blogs.
  • The comical notion that penny-pinching Jon will ever buy a Mac.

I recommend you check it out, I found it tremendously useful:

Speech Recognition for Bloggers: The Ultimate Guide

About the Author: Sonia Simone is Senior Editor of Copyblogger and the founder of Remarkable Communication.


Thesis Theme for WordPress

Sonia Simone Fri, 27 Nov 2009 20:27:16 +0000

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Big band leaders whose names weren't Goodman, Dorsey, or Miller

Big band leaders whose names weren't Goodman, Dorsey, or Miller

1. Artie Shaw
2. Paul Whiteman
3. Jimmie Lunceford
4. Stan Kenton
5. Tex Beneke
6. Woody Herman
7. Lionel Hampton
8. Duke Ellington
9. Count Basie
10. Gene Krupa

noreply@blogger.com (My Daily List) Sat, 28 Nov 2009 04:43:00 +0000

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