Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Should You Crowdsource Your Logo Design?

Crowdsource Your Logo

Don’t know your CMYK from RGB or your typefaces from fonts?

For anyone who doesn’t “speak design” (which is about all of us!), the prospect of managing a major design project like logo development can seem overwhelming and downright intimidating.

For those of us lucky enough to work for a company with a seemingly endless budget, you can afford to hire a major design firm. They’ll handle your logo creation, color palette, and typeface selection, and all the different design elements that will go into creating your brand identity.

The trouble is that for the rest of us who are solo-prenuers or work at a small business startup, hiring a major design firm is often times a financial no-go.

Your solution: crowdsource your logo.

Crowdsourcing is the practice of outsourcing ideas by soliciting contributions for a large group or online community. Don’t confuse it with freelancing. While hiring a freelance designer is certainly cheaper than a major design firm, a freelancer is still similar to a design firm. You pay a retainer, receive a set number of options, and are limited for the number of revisions.

Crowdsourcing is quite different.

Most of us crowdsource every day and don’t even realize it. Ever posted a question on Facebook or Twitter asking for restaurant recommendations or what folks thought about the latest summer blockbuster? Yep, you’re crowdsourcing!

I know what you’re thinking. When it comes to getting dinner recommendations or a yay/nay on the latest movie, the stakes are a lot lower. Suffer through a forgettable meal and you move on. But make a major blunder on your logo design, and you’re not only wasted time and money but also you risk hurting your brand identity.

Many designers will argue that entrusting your brand’s future identity to a team of relative unknowns is risky, and they have a valid point. Working with a professional firm is certainly a valuable experience. But if you’re strapped for cash and just don’t have the funds to invest in design right now, one option for generating fresh ideas without breaking the bank is to crowdsource your logo.

Here’s why you should consider going straight to the (crowd) source for your next logo design.

Reasons to Crowdsource Your Logo

Stay Within Budget

Sure, you may dream about working with a Madison Avenue ad agency to build your brand, but if your budget can only afford the Microsoft clip art version of an ad agency, it’s time to think outside the box. Hiring a design firm can cost thousands of dollars; most insist on a retainer prior to initiating work, which means you’re stuck paying for the final results whether or not you like them. Additionally, you may be limited to a fixed number of initial options or revisions. Crowdsourcing provides more variety at a much lower price point.

Expand Your Options

When you’re just getting started with your business, more options are better! Maybe you have a clear vision that your logo should be in the color green and contain a natural element (like a wave or a tree) but beyond that, you’re totally lost. With crowdsourcing, you submit a basic design brief that’s open to creative interpretation by designers. The result: hundreds of options you might otherwise have never considered.

Build Word-of-Mouth Buzz

When you crowdsource a design, you first get to review all the options. Once you’ve narrowed it down to a handful that you like, you can then invite friends and colleagues to vote on their favorite design. Post a link on Facebook or Twitter to get customers, clients and fans in on the voting. Not only do you benefit from a wide range of feedback outside your immediate bubble, but savvy businesses can also use this as a free PR opportunity.

Optimize Creativity

While most design firms truly want the very best for their clients, sometimes firms will sacrifice good design in order to please a difficult client and secure future business. With crowdsourcing, designers are only concerned with presenting the very best options for the client; there’s no concern about retaining future work. This means that designers are free to think creatively in ways you might never have considered!

Bottom Line

While there are certainly drawbacks to crowdsourcing – you may end up sorting through a hundred designs you hate! – If your business is on a budget, it’s undeniably the best option to source quality design. Plus, with some crowdsourcing platforms offering a money-back guarantee, it’s definitely an option worth considering.

Colored Pencils Photo via Shutterstock

This article, "Should You Crowdsource Your Logo Design?" was first published on Small Business Trends

How to Optimize Your Social Profiles for Search

Have you thought about optimizing your social accounts for search? Do you know where to use keywords in your social profiles? In social media, there are two search engines you have to optimize for: the search function within each social network and Google search. In this article you’ll discover where to use keywords in your […]

This post How to Optimize Your Social Profiles for Search first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
Social Media Examiner - Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

How to Create a High-Converting Landing Page

Landing strip header image (Landing page)

What is the first thing visitors notice when they come to your website?

If you’re being deliberate about how you direct people to your site, it’s going to be a landing page. The first glimpse of your landing page decides whether the viewer will stay on your website or if they will bounce.

Every cent you spend on running ads, or every minute you commit to writing guest posts – all of it is a waste if you don’t convert visitors into leads or customers.

If you are not converting, the problem might be your landing page.

You might be offering superb content or products and your ads might even be generating a good click through rate. But if your conversions are stagnant or diminishing, it is your landing page that needs more work…

What is a landing page?

A landing page is any webpage on which the visitor arrives or stops at, while visiting a website.

It usually serves a purpose of enticing a website visitor to do something specific – sign up for your email list, buy a product or set up a meeting.

A great landing page is one that targets a particular audience. Drawing the attention of your audience is done when you provide them with the information they seek about a topic. If the first look at your landing page provides them with the information they are looking for, their search ends there and they are ready to take action. Here, the first impression plays the one and only part!

If you slip up on the first impression, potential  leads fall through the cracks.

Do you need a landing page?

If you are trying to build an audience or sell something online, then yes.

A landing page plays a very crucial role for your website – it helps you turn traffic into leads.

If you have multiple products or offerings, you don’t want to confuse the visitor with too much information. Create multiple landing pages and make sure every one has a unique purpose of its own.

The anatomy of a high-converting landing page.

Let’s take the example of Rankwatch to understand the key components of a high-converting landing page:

Headline

This is the first place that catches the visitor’s eye. It should be phrased in such a way that concisely and completely covers everything that the page has to offer.

rankwatch - landing page

Body text

This includes the text on the landing page. It should be interesting enough to make the consumers stay on the page and complete enough to give the relevant information that the page is intending to convey.

Email Alerts - landing page

Keywords

These are the main words you want people to discover you for.  Page title, heading tags, and the content on the landing page should include the essential keywords.
The highlighted word is a keyword used in the text of Rankwatch.

Rank tracking - landing page

Image

Landing pages should include a creative image to appeal to visitors.

Rankwatch 2 - landing page

Social sharing buttons

These buttons enable the visitors to share the content of your page with their connections or networks on social media platforms.

Social sharing - landing page

Hidden Navigation

The top/side navigation bars on the landing page should be hidden to minimize distraction, friction and bounce rate.

rankwatch 3 - landing page

Conversion form

This form enters the customers credentials in exchange for an offer – leading to sales leads.

Request demo - landing page

Don’t underestimate the power of video on your landing page

Watching is always better than reading. No wonder youtube is the second biggest search engine on the internet.

A study by eyeviewdigital.com shows that putting a video on your landing page can increase your conversion rate by up to 80%. Is this not a strong enough reason to consider using a video on your landing page?

Not satisfied yet?

Go through these point and then decide for yourself, videos…

1. Build consumer trust

Research by invodo revealed that 52% of consumers say that after watching a video about a product they are more confident to make a purchase decisions. People always feel connected when they personally relate to your video.

2. People are lazy

It is a human nature. They try to crack the shortest possible way to do something. Watching is always preferable over reading.

3. Keep visitors on your site for longer

According to a study by statisticbrain.com you only have 8 seconds to impress a visitor (which is their attention span). A video explaining the product will tempt the user to stay for a longer time on your site.

4. Increases conversions

I shows you some stats about this already. At the end of the day, the main aim is to get the conversion rate as high as possible.

5. Helps people understand complicated products

If you have a product that is very technology oriented, explaining it in just words won’t answer all of your customers queries. A video on the other hand, explaining how to use your product, has a way of conveying a complex message in a much simpler way.

What does your landing page need for a better conversion rate?

If you want to increase the conversion rate of your landing page, these are the most important elements;

  • Clear call-to-actionthis is what you want your visitors to do. You want them to sign up, shop now, contact us, see your video, etc.

  • An offer – this could be anything, coupons, discounts, a free trial, a gift, etc. You give these to your customers in exchange for what you want them to do.

  • Narrow focus – keep your landing page simple. Variety leads to distractions and then people take a long time to make a decision.

  • Important attributes – these are the reasons your visitor will take action. You can do this by highlighting the important features of your product or service and how they will improve your customers life.

  • Effective headline – make your headline catchy and attention grabbing. But also make sure it captures the key benefits of your offer.

  • Resolution savvy layout – create the layout of your landing page in a low resolution. There are many people still using low resolution computers.

  • Tidy visuals – keep your design simple. White space makes the important factors on your page stand out. Use bold fonts and videos to make it more interesting.

  • Social proof – people have a tendency to believe/follow things that others have done and had success at. You can highlight reviews by your customers, press mentions, testimonials, or even build statistics based on your customer responses.

A/B testing your landing page

A/B testing is a way of experimenting between two or more pages to check which one performs or converts better. This experiment can be done with as many pages you want to test but should only test one element at a time.

Once it is decided what element to test on your landing page, you can create different versions of it.

Benefits for a/b testing your page

  • A/B testing helps to measure the actual behavior of your customers under real-world conditions. You can confidently conclude that if version B sells more than version A, then version B is the design you should show all users in the future.

  • It can also measure very small performance differences with high statistical significance if you can attract traffic to each design.

  • It is a relatively cheap method for testing landing pages.

Is one landing page enough for your website?

One is never enough. If your conversion rates are low it might be because you do not have enough landing pages.

According to data taken from the report- “Marketing Benchmarks From 7000 Businesses” by Hubspot - having 1-5 or 6-10 landing pages does not show much visitor-to- lead conversion.  But, increasing the number of landing pages from 10 to 15 shows a 55% increase in leads for a company.

The more landing pages you have, the more pages that get indexed by Google. If search results show your landing pages, this cuts down the steps the user would take to find that page on your site. Hence, easy discovery leads to better conversions.

Lots of landing pages create a variety for the user. This helps in creating something unique to offer every user.

More landing pages mean you have more things to market. It gives you more data to promote and more content to email your contacts and share with your followers on social media.

Tools to boost your landing page conversion rate

Crazy Egg

This tool gives you reports on which parts of your site are getting the most user attention. It is a paid tool.

Plans start from $9 a month. It allows you to run a heat map, scroll map, develop confetti reports and much more.

 Crazy Egg - landing page

Landing page grader from wordstream

This tool uses your Google Adwords account to assess your landing page based on its keyword relevancy, conversions, spend, form length and much more. It also helps you get better than your competitors in your industry.

 WordStream - landing page

Unbounce

With Unbounce you can not only test your landing pages but also build them without any IT assistance. They have a large collection of templates to choose from. It is a paid service which provides all A/B testing tools needed for checking conversions on a landing page. The plans start at $49 a month.

 unbounce - landing page

Optimizely

This tool also allows you to create and test your landing pages. Optimizely gives certain features for free to develop a basic website. You can contact them for quotes for various business plans.

 Optimizely - landing page

Ion interactive landing page assessment

This is not one of the best tools in the market but, it is a good free tool if you are a beginner. This tool assesses your website by asking you 13 multiple choice questions.

 ion interactive - landing page

Landing page analyzer

This tool makes an in depth analysis of your website by asking you a set of 21 questions as well as asking you for certain data about your website. After answering the questions the tool gives you an overall grade as well as separate scores for different areas of your landing page. It is one of the good free tools in the market.

 VWO - landing page

Usability hub

This is a paid tool. You can choose from a set of four tests to evaluate your landing pages and add whichever suits you to your shopping cart. This tool provides an option to earn ‘karma’ and run tests for free. You can earn ‘karma’ by being a part of other user’s tests.

 Useability hub - landing page

Sum up

The major thing to conclude from the above is that every website landing page should accomplish one goal- whether it is about selling something, creating brand awareness or growing leads. Your landing page should be different from your website’s homepage. Just make sure that the visitor gets the information they are looking for, otherwise, they won’t hang around.

Do you have anything to add? Please share your comments below!

Guest author: Sidhant Vats is the Marketing Communications Manager at RankWatch.


The post How to Create a High-Converting Landing Page appeared first on Jeffbullas's Blog.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

A Visit to IKEA Inspired These Lessons for Home Remodeling Websites

Lessons for Home Remodeling Websites

For each business category, websites may have to serve a different content purpose, but have the same business purpose, to educate visitors and make them customers.

A remodeler’s website should inspire than inform, show a visitor the possibilities that they can never imagine they could do with their home. If you need a new deck or are searching for someone to build it, you should go to a remodeling website that shows different possibilities that you never knew existed.

Lessons for Home Remodeling Websites

Below are some lessons inspired by this visit to IKEA that can be applied to home remodeling websites.

Create Inspiring Content

IKEA does a great job with providing content for the people. The stores visualize what can fit into a 595 sq. ft. home.  With furniture staged down to the smallest detail — bamboo baskets  and decorative lights, computer tables, bedside book shelves, etc. Your imagination goes to the possibilities for your own apartment or home.

Lesson: Have quality photos of finished projects on your website. Spur the customer’s vision of their project by using  your website as your showcase.

Easy to Use Navigation

From the moment you enter the store, IKEA has prominent signs that entice you to follow a path with clearly marked arrows and overhead signs. Don’t make people think about where to go next. Make it easy.

Lesson: The design of your website and the pages should be simple to navigate and make visitors stay engaged with your website. Today, using Google Analytics, you can see a visitor’s behavior through your website and see how your visitors navigate your website.

Lessons for Home Remodeling Websites

Understandable Calls to Action

Ikea’s carts, bags and instructional signs help you find the item you want to purchase. Complementary items are placed alongside even if they belong to different sections with clear signs showing where you can find them.

Lesson: On your website, place Calls to Action like phone numbers and contact forms to answer questions and sign up for your blog or newsletter.

Help — Never Too Far Away

If you ever wonder how you are going to assemble the heavy king bed or the big book shelf, IKEA assures you that help is available. From delivery to assembly, they’ve got you covered. And helpful employees stay out of your way — until you want them to help you.

Lesson: Use a chat tool like Olark that can be integrated into your website to get questions even if you are not in front of your computer.

Enticing Visual Displays

Upon entering the store the whole way to the cafeteria, there are poster boards, signs and even furniture and kitchenware hanging from the walls and ceilings.

Lesson: Along with photos, use videos to showcase your work throughout adjacent areas on the site. Visitors to one section of the website get a chance to easily look at similar sections.

Easy to Fill Shopping Carts

On the way to the checkout counter there are large boxes of small goods and essentials.

Lesson: Follow up with customers when they send an inquiry and give them thoughts and tips on other smaller projects that can be accomplished along with the big project. This is a strategy to make your customer a lifetime customer instead of a one time customer.

Like IKEA, make your customers and prospects visit your website regularly for ideas. Does your website do this already?

IKEA Showroom Photo via Shutterstock, Store Images via Shashi Bellamkonda

This article, "A Visit to IKEA Inspired These Lessons for Home Remodeling Websites" was first published on Small Business Trends

10 Free eBooks Every Content Marketer Has to Read

10 eBooks Content Marketers Have to Read

How often do you hear that content marketing is the sure fire way to success?

That it will bring you followers, traffic, leads and sales?

Quite a lot I bet.

But then how often does your content actually bring in followers, traffic, leads and sales?

If it’s not working out like you’ve been promised then it’ll have something to do with your approach.

Whether it’s a lack of copywriting or design skills, you don’t understand how to target your audience, or you don’t apply SEO techniques – there’s a lot that can impact the effectiveness of your marketing campaigns.

So that’s why I’ve compiled a list of the top 10 FREE ebooks that you need to read today if you want to succeed at content marketing.

1. Create buyer personas that work – Wyzowl

It’s easy to create content that you think will work, but if it doesn’t resonate with the needs of your audience then you may as well throw in the towel right now.

And that’s why a buyer persona can help you!

A buyer persona enables you to define your target audience so that you can speak in their language and resonate with what they care about.

This eBook from Wyzowl will walk you through all the steps that you need to create your own buyer personas for your business. It’ll get you to assess everything about your customers including demographics, buying trends, values and goals.

This ebook includes:

  • What a buyer persona is
  • What you need to include
  • A free guide to creating your buyer personas

You can download the ebook here.

buyer persona ebook every content marketer should read

2. The marketer’s crash course in visual content creation – HubSpot

Considering articles with images get 94% more views, a well-designed piece of content really can make a huge difference.

But if you’re not a designer then it can be hard to know what looks good, or even how to make something look good!

This ebook created by HubSpot is the perfect guide to use if you’re not overly confident with your design skills. It offers a crash course in visual content creation with plenty of tips on how to get it right.

The ebook includes:

  • How to create visually appealing content on a budget
  • Infographic tips
  • Real examples of what to do and what not to do
  • Software and tools to use
  • Stock photo tips

You can download the ebook here.

Visual creation ebook every content marketer should read

3. Copywriting 101: How to craft compelling copy – Copyblogger

Anyone can string a bunch of words together and claim that they know how to write, but how often do you read copy that makes you want to read more than just the headline?

Contrary to popular belief, copywriting isn’t easy. Readers get bored and/or they don’t have the time to read paragraphs of text – unless of course the writing is SO good – it captures their attention throughout.

So what better way than to learn how to write awesome copy than by reading an ebook from Copyblogger – the original copy experts!

In this ebook you’ll find plenty of tips on how great storytelling can help you create great copy.

This ebook includes:

  • How to write headlines that work
  • How to write persuasive copy
  • How to sell with benefits
  • How to effective write calls-to-action

You can download the ebook here.

Copyblogger ebook every content marketer should read

4. The ROI of content marketing – Kuno

Did you know that over half of marketers don’t measure the ROI of their content?

It’s probably not a lack of time that’s the problem, more so a lack of understanding how to measure content marketing ROI. But in the world of marketing everything should be measured, otherwise how do you know if your strategy is the right one for your business?

This ebook that has been created by Kuno, will help you think about the goals that you want to achieve with your content, and how you can go about measuring them.

This ebook includes:

  • Top tips on how to measure content ROI
  • The best metrics for measuring content ROI
  • How to gauge the success of your content
  • Tips on how to improve your content ROI

You can download the ebook here.

ROI Content ebook every content marketer should read

5. The definitive guide for social listening for smarter business – Meltwater

There are plenty of brands using social to promote their content – and why not – social can give your content the publicity that it deserves. But how often to you listen to your followers? And I mean, really listen to what they have to say.

Social media isn’t a place to simply talk at your customers. It’s a place to gather data and find out what your customers care about, so that you can start to create content with them in mind.

This definitive guide for social listening, created by Meltwater, can help you discover more about why you should give social listening a go, and how you can do it.

This ebook includes:

  • How to drive word of mouth marketing
  • How to find out if your followers really like you
  • How to keep tabs on the competition
  • How to find conversations that matter

You can download the ebook here.

Social ebook every content marketer should read

6. 8 steps to blogging mastery – Jeff Bullas

I probably don’t have to tell you how important blogging is for the success of your business. But did you know that 82% of marketers who blog daily acquired a customer using their blog?

Blogging really is a content marketers best friend. And what better way than to learn about it than by one of the best bloggers in the business, Jeff Bullas.

This ebook sheds light on how Jeff grew his blog traffic to over 4 million visitors a year!

This ebook includes:

  • How to create a memorable blog brand
  • A five step marketing plan that works
  • Building a successful blogging foundation
  • How to create inspired content

You can download the ebook from his homepage.

Jeff Bullas ebook every content marketer should read

7. The best practice guide for effective blogger outreach – Inkybee

Did you know that there are plenty of bloggers out there who would love to share or post your content? An effective blogger outreach strategy is a must!

By outreaching your content to bloggers and influencers within your niche, you’ll help give your content a better chance of being seen by a huge audience.

So where do you start?

This ebook created by Inkybee details everything you need to know about how to create an outreach strategy and will help you build strong relationships with bloggers.

This ebook includes:

  • How to set objectives for an outreach campaign
  • How to develop relationships with bloggers
  • How to track and measure your content
  • Top tips to maintain your blogger relationships

You can download this ebook here.

Inkybee ebook every content marketer should read

8. Building and scaling an inbound team – Hubspot

Understanding inbound marketing is the first step to a successful campaign. But as a content marketer, you know that already, right?

What you need to do is make sure that everyone else is on the same page as you – and you can do that by hiring the right people and structuring your team for success.

This ebook from HubSpot is the perfect guide to help you discover who will make a good inbound candidate and how to create an effective strategy within your team.

This ebook includes:

  • What to look for when interviewing inbound candidates
  • How to structure and grow your inbound team
  • Top tips from Hubspot about how they structure their team

You can download this ebook here.

ebook every content marketer should read

9. Understanding SEO techniques – Tone

Ah, SEO. It’s not everyone’s cup of tea, but if you want to be a successful content marketer, then you’re going to have to learn about SEO and what it can do for you.

This ebook from Tone is a great guide full of top tips for marketers to utilize SEO throughout their content.

This ebook includes:

  • SEO tools you don’t know about
  • How to use fresh content to help your SEO
  • How search engines view your site

You can download the ebook here.

new ebook every content marketer should read

10. Quick guide for content promotion – Relevance

So you’ve created an awesome piece of content that ticks all the boxes. But if you only promote it on your own channels then you could be missing out on a huge chunk of people consuming it – mainly your audience.

Content promotion is a must and in this ebook from Relevance, you’ll discover how to create an effective content promotion strategy.

This ebook includes:

  • The difference between paid, earned and owned media
  • 10 essential tools for content promotion
  • How to create a promotion strategy
  • Best practices and top tips for content promotion success

You can download the ebook here.

Sorry ebook every content marketer should read

Takeaway

Content marketing really does work, so long as you have the right strategy in place! Be sure to download these 10 useful ebooks and put the tips you’ve learned into action today. And if you’re looking for more ebooks like these then check out Publi.sh – a marketplace full of free guides and resources!

Guest Author: Sarah Quinn works over at Publi.sh - a free marketplace full of guides and resources for marketers! 


The post 10 Free eBooks Every Content Marketer Has to Read appeared first on Jeffbullas's Blog.

27 Reasons People Aren’t Reading Your Blog Posts

Not reading your blog posts - header image

Do you ever look at prolific blogs and get frustrated by how easy they make it seem?

Thousands of people read, comment and share each new post on the blog.

It can be discouraging, especially if you’re a new blogger.

In contrast, your blog may only get a few dozen hits each post. And the only shares that happen come from your own social media accounts.

“Why aren’t people reading my blog posts?”

This same question may have popped into your mind. I know it’s one I’ve struggled with before. Every new blogger has struggled with the concept of traffic, audience and building a successful blog. And that’s why many give up on their blogging before they see success.

Don’t be another one of these failed blog statistics.

Identify the reasons people aren’t reading your blog. Then take strategic steps to improve.

These 27 reasons will help get you started on your quest:

1. You haven’t identified a strong audience persona

You can’t create compelling content without an in-depth knowledge of your audience. Personas not only help you create better content, but they also help guide your topics, strategy and monetization efforts.

2. You aren’t creating content specifically for the persona

It’s not enough to just have a persona. You must create content specifically for it.

Persona - reading your blog posts
(source)

This level of hyper-targeted content attracts the right reader to your blog.

3. You don’t know how your audience searches for content

This requires a deeper step into your overall persona.

  • What does the audience search for?
  • What kind of things do they need to learn?
  • How can my content serve those needs?

Answer those questions and you’ll not only have a path for content creation, but you’ll know exactly how to optimize for SEO.

4. Your content’s style and tone don’t align with your brand

If you have a serious brand, but write in a laid-back, silly fashion, you create a brand misalignment. And when this happens, you confuse readers and detach them from what you’re saying.

5. You focus too much on products, services and promotions

People don’t always want to read about you.

Promotion - reading your blog posts
(source)

The occasional announcement is okay, but you shouldn’t always be promoting something. Make your content about the reader – not you.

6. You don’t publish new posts on a regular schedule

Readers want consistency. Without it, they’ll never become attached to your brand’s content.

It can be tough in the face of competing priorities, but create a schedule and stick to it.

7. You aren’t creating content that provides enough value

Time is a precious thing. If you don’t offer immense value, why should someone waste what little time they have consuming your content?

Answer: They shouldn’t.

As an example, take a look at a recent Currency Liquidator post on the Iraqi Dinar. Clocking in at nearly 2,500 words, the post offers the kinds of in-depth statistics those interested in foreign currency need to make investment decisions:

 Currency Liquidator - reading your blog posts

(source)

8. You don’t test different types of blog posts for engagement

There are numerous types of content that drive traffic.

Periodic table of content - reading your blog posts
(source)

That should keep you busy for a while. Test out different post styles to see what type of content your audience actually wants to read – not just what you think they want.

9. You’re not infusing any personality into your writing

Bored!

That’s what people think when your content lacks personality. Even the most serious brands can allow their personality to shine through. Don’t be boring.

10. You don’t include enough images throughout the post

We’re visual creatures.

Including images throughout your post creates natural breaks in the content. This keeps readers engaged and reading, instead of distracted and leaving.

11. You aren’t formatting your posts for reading on the web

Please stop writing posts with huge blocks of text.

The online world has its own style for writing. If you don’t adhere to these guidelines, people will leave the page without ever reading a word.

12. Your content doesn’t add a new perspective

If you don’t have anything to add to the conversation, don’t say anything at all. There’s no reason to regurgitate the same thing hundreds of others have already said.

Position your content from a fresh perspective for best results.

13. Your posts don’t stick to the intended topic

Try to avoid veering off topic in your posts. If you’ve ever muddled your way through a post that jumps from one subject to another, you know how frustrating this can be.

When I feel myself getting away from the subject at hand, I make a note of the digression and use it as the springboard for a new post.

14. You use poor grammar and make spelling errors

This should be obvious, but I see so many mistakes online that I’ll say it anyways. Do your best to avoid mistakes, even small slip ups here and there.

Poor grammar - reading your blog posts
(source)

The online world may seem forgiving, but that’s not an excuse. Major syntax, grammar and spelling mistakes throughout are always unacceptable.

15. You only use cheesy stock images in posts

The visuals you use in your content influence your overall. tone, style and branding. Most stock photos are cheesy. They’re staged and unnatural.

Stock images - reading your blog posts
(source)

If you only use stock photography, it may be doing you and your brand more harm than good.

16. You have an outdated or unprofessional blog design

In many ways, design – not content – is king.

If you have an outdated, unprofessional blog design, would-be readers will leave your site before they ever give your content a chance.

17. Your blog isn’t optimized for mobile reading

More and more people are using their mobile phone to consume content. It’s also increasingly important for SEO.

A responsive design ensures that your website is optimized for mobile viewing. Don’t overlook this key design aspect.

18. Your blog takes too long to load

By nature, the Internet gives us information as fast as we want it.

If your website takes too long to load, readers will abandon their quest to get information from your site – and they’ll quickly find it somewhere else.

19. You haven’t optimized for social sharing

Publishing solid content is only half the battle.

Getting people to read it can only happen if they know it’s there. Social sharing optimization makes it easy for the readers you do have to help you spread the word.

20. You don’t optimize every post for SEO

You don’t need a full-time, in-house SEO expert to make strides in the search engine rankings.

Plenty of tools make it possible for you to rank well from the content you post. Take advantage of them and watch your readership soar.

21. You aren’t crafting compelling headlines

The headlines you use could mean the difference between dozens of people reading your post and thousands of people flocking to your blog.

Learn how to write compelling headlines.

Headlines - reading your blog posts
(source)

Spend as much time on the headline as you do for the entire post, if that’s what it takes. It’s that important to the success of your blog.

22. You aren’t testing new headlines using social media

You know you need to create compelling headlines. But have you tried using social media to test different variations?

Testing headlines - reading your blog posts

Formulas and the success of others don’t guarantee your success.

Use your social profiles to test several variations of headlines to see what kinds work best to capture clicks from your audience.

23. You don’t promote the post on social media enough

Don’t post just once.

That’s a huge mistake that many bloggers make. People consume more information in a day than most of their ancestors did in their entire life. Go ahead and promote your new post a few times. You might just be surprised by the results.

24. You haven’t reached out to influencers about the post

No man is an island.

Successful bloggers are always leaning on the influence of others to gain readers. If you want readers, reach out to the people in your industry that already have them. A few ways you can build a connection include:

  • Adding immense value to influencers by providing your assistance.
  • Asking for their input or expertise on an upcoming post.
  • Interviewing them for their new book release.

25. You aren’t building a targeted social media audience

It’s great if you have thousands of followers. But if you’re running a marketing blog and you’ve bought a bunch of fake followers, what good will those bots do for you?

Ultimately, it’s better to have dozens of highly-targeted followers than thousands that don’t care about you.

26. You spend more time writing than promoting

Some people really like taking an 80/20 approach to their work.

And if you’re applying this concept to your blogging, you’ll want to spend 80% of your time promoting and 20% of your time writing. Don’t get bogged down by the writing. Go find your readers.

27. You don’t update your email list about new posts

Anyone who’s starting a blog needs an email list.

But if you don’t do anything with that list, it won’t do you any good. Set up your email marketing service to update list members each time a new blog post releases. This can typically be done automatically, giving you a quick and easy way to get more people reading your blog posts.

It’s frustrating when people don’t read your blog posts, but it doesn’t have to be that way.

Which of these areas are you struggling with on your blog? I’d love to hear about your challenges in the comments below.

Guest Author: Aaron Agius is an online marketer, web strategist and entrepreneur and you can check him out at AaronAgius.com


The post 27 Reasons People Aren’t Reading Your Blog Posts appeared first on Jeffbullas's Blog.

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