The 10 Smartest Things You Can Do to Promote Your New Blog


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how to promote your blog

This is a guest post by Christian Russell.

The beginning phase of a new blog is the most fun, isn’t it? You’ve come up with a great idea. You’ve done your research, and you are confident that your new blog idea is going to rock. There’s a market, there are people spending money in that market, and you’ve found your niche. The possibilities are endless, the sky is the limit!

It’s like the old Chinese saying: “as long as you’re planning a journey, you own the journey. The minute you embark on that journey, the journey owns you.” Plan well, my friends! But don’t forget that in order to succeed, you have to get out there and work it! And that’s what this post is about.

The Importance of Doing it All

Some of us are great idea people. Some of us are great at executing. Some of us are great at design. Some of us are great writers, and some of us are more business-minded. If your ambition is to make your blog a success from a business perspective, it’s important to know that you’re going to have to wear all these hats at one time or another.

I say this because while I’m giving you a list of the 10 Smartest Things You Can Do to Promote Your New Blog, I know that most of you bloggers out there will do some of them…or most of them. But most of you will not do all of them. Reason being, you will find some of them fun and others plain drudgery. Still, I encourage you to do them all. Success comes out of hiding when you’re willing to do the things that others are NOT willing to do. The extra work is always what makes the difference!

Where Your Success is Hiding

After 3 years of internet marketing full time and 9 years of sales experience and training over a thousand people to go out and increase their income, I can tell you one thing for sure. If you do the work, the results will come. I promise you! They may not come as quickly as you want, and there will be bumps in the road, and these are the reasons most of us fail. Not because we do not have what it takes. We just quit too soon, and it really is a shame.

Getting Started on the Right Foot

Here’s the deal: start off with a clear idea of what you want to achieve. Don’t go into your blogging endeavor blind, hoping to be “successful”. Because what the heck does that mean? Perhaps you want to simply share your ideas with the world. Perhaps you want 100k unique visitors every month to feel you’ve accomplished that. Perhaps you prefer to concentrate on income, and your main concern is making $100k next year. OK. This is doable. The point is to be specific.

I want to tell you with as much conviction as I can muster, that you CAN and WILL achieve your blogging goals if you’re willing to do the work to make them happen! Success in this or any field is not a mystical process. It is a predictable and manageable thing that happens as a result of doing what needs to be done over a period of time.

I cannot tell you you’ll make a million dollars within 18 months or give you any specific time frames. It doesn’t work like that. What I can tell you unequivocally, without a doubt, is that if you do the work that needs to be done on a daily basis over time, you will be amazed and delighted with your success, and you will see how un-magical it is. Perhaps money doesn’t grow on trees, but it IS out there for the picking.

The 10 Smartest Things You Can Do to Promote Your New Blog

I’m so excited about the opportunities that blogging presents us as business owners, and I hope that you follow this list and let me know how it goes!

  1. Write a daily action plan: Every promotion plan requires daily action. Now, the size of your goals and how quickly you want to achieve them will weigh heavily on what daily activities you want to write into your plan. But it’s very important to have this written up and have it be something you commit to doing daily. Daily action is key. And your daily action plan has to contain tasks that produce results that will grow your business. Checking your Adsense revenues and reviewing your analytics, for example, while important, do not count. These are administrative tasks that do not directly produce growth. The point of your daily action plan is to write up a specific plan to perform specific actions every day…actions that will bring visitors to your site and grow your business. For example, I make 100 personal contacts daily and write 3 pages of content. I do this every day. Simple. Sometimes very difficult, and I sometimes fail. But it is the gauge I use to measure success on a day-to-day basis. It gives you something to shoot for that you can achieve every day. It should be difficult but doable, and it should contain actions that cause your business to grow.
  2. Go 60 days without tweaking your site: After you get your first design complete, and your site is up, you will be constantly tempted to tweak it. And tweak it. And tweak it. Resist the urge. Make a commitment to launch your blog, and then do nothing but promote the crap out of it for 60 days. Don’t get me wrong. Design is important. But constantly tweaking your site is a distraction. At the beginning you have no community. You’re maybe getting 10, 20, 30 visitors a day. Get out there, network and talk to people. Brand yourself. These things are infinitely more important than making sure your logo looks just right. The ultimate design will come. It will happen, trust me! But if you’ve failed to build your readership, no one is going to care. Likewise, I can point out a lot of very popular blogs with designs that have much to be desired. Do you want to look hot, or do you want to BE hot? I think you see where I’m going with this!
  3. Refuse to place ads: Here’s the thing. Advertising revenue is cool. But when you’re first launching your blog, you have a lot of work to do. Tweaking out different ad modules and trying to optimize your ads for a blog that is going to be making you $10 a month at best is a waste of your time. We’re talking about creating a winning business blog, no? So just skip the advertising business for now. Yes, you can make a few bucks, but the most valuable asset you have right now is your time. Don’t waste it on something that is only going to make you a few bucks. Instead, focus on building a real business and attracting a lot of people. Then, put up ads later if you want; when you’ll actually be able to make enough to make it worth your while!
  4. Pillar content: The concept of pillar content is something I learned from David Risley. When you launch your blog, have an inventory of 20-30 killer article ideas ready to go. Fill your blog up with great content that truly drives home the focus of your blog, attracts targeted visitors and shows your true expertise. You’re laying down the foundation of your business here. Take some real time creating your pillar content. It will attract readers for a long time to come, and it will show your new readers what you’re all about. Put your best foot forward!
  5. Schmooze: In other words, networking is a key business activity. Always has been, always will be. Internet business is a people business, believe it or not. Find the top 20-30 blogs in your space, and get acquainted with them. Read them. Get to know the authors of those blogs. Build relationships with them. Yeah, it takes time. Yeah, it takes persistence. It’s also very much worth it. One word of caution: I’m not talking about just blasting these people with spam, asking them to help you out. I’m saying get to know them a bit. You can learn a lot by hanging with people who are already successful in your field.
  6. Link building: Aaron Wall and Andy Hagans over at SEOBook wrote a fantastic article about how to build links. I recommend reading their article several times and implementing these link building tactics into your daily routine. The art and science of link building of course is beyond the scope of this post, but link building HAS to be mentioned, because it’s a fundamental activity for anyone who hopes to build a successful business blog.
  7. Blog and forum commenting: Anyone familiar with blogs is familiar with the activity of leaving comments on blogs. This is an essential activity for anyone building a presence online. Blogs and forums offer you a tremendous opportunity to become part of the conversation. Don’t wreck it by being over-promotional, leaving keywords instead of your actual name or any other spam-type activities. Just use your real name, leave insightful and helpful comments and genuinely participate.
  8. Respond to your readers: I’m consistently surprised by how many internet business owners do not respond to messages or personally respond to comments. If it’s not your priority, OK. I just don’t know why it wouldn’t be. There’s a lot to be said about following the basics. In other words, check your email! And be responsive and appreciative to your audience. Every minute you spend interacting on a personal level with your readers is well-spent.
  9. Immediately begin building an email list: From day one, make sure you have an opt-in box and encourage your visitors to sign up for an email list. There is an argument for waiting until you have more traffic, but I say that an email list of 10 people is way more exciting than you might realize. Think about how cool this is…people are finding value in what you do! Seriously, open the door to communication by email right out of the gate. Don’t wait. The sooner you begin conversing with people this way, the sooner you’ll see that it’s a great way to maintain a dialog with your readers. You will get comments, criticism and helpful insights that you wouldn’t otherwise get. Email is old school I suppose, but it’s here to stay, and it’s still the way most users prefer to subscribe.
  10. Use the Power of 100 Rule: Coming originally from direct sales, I learned a rule from other top performers that has always served me well. I’ve gotten away from it over the last couple years, but I’ve recently gotten back into the habit of practicing this rule, and it works like a charm. It’s very simple. Make 100 personal contacts a day. Sending a personal email (not bulk email), responding to a message, a phone call, leaving a thoughtful blog comment, etc. Personal contacts…100 of them…every day. It often forces you to not watch TV, because you still have 35 more contacts to make before you go to bed. It’s a mechanism that gets your priorities straightened out without you even having to think about it. Practiced over time, you will be pleasantly surprised at how much business comes your way as a result of practicing the Power of 100. Bottom line: be social. The internet business really is a people business.

Bonus Tip: Invest in your business. If you want big results, you need to take big action. One of the biggest things I’ve done that has expanded my network and enabled me to truly get my business off the ground is something that many internet marketers and bloggers do not consider. Travel. Conferences. Meeting people in person. Getting to know people and shaking hands with other successful business owners is a very valuable activity.

One trip I took to New York led to several relationships I still have today as well as an exciting affiliate program I’m still running today, three years later. Yes, the trip cost some money, and I came back with an immense hangover, but it has paid for itself many times over and continues to do so.

I do not recall a single networking trip I’ve taken that has not ultimately paid for itself many times over by bringing more business my way. It is this type of investment and commitment to your business that will make it “real” for you. I included it as a bonus, because I honestly feel it may be the most powerful of all. Internet business is real business! It’s not this nebulous process, involving “traffic” and “clicks”. These are people you’re working with and people you’re selling to. In many fundamental respects, business has not changed all that much.

These business basics will serve you well. If I’ve learned anything, it’s that business is simple, and the simple stuff works!

Christian Russell is a full time internet marketer and blogger. He writes a blog called Next Level Blogger, which focuses on using business and sales priniciples to effectively monetize your business blog. You can find him on Facebook and Twitter as well!


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  • Hey Christian, My partner Tiffany is a massage therapist and she sent me to this page - she called it the "Holy Grail" =) We are both semi beginners with blogging and this article has really been helpful reading. I just wanted to say THANK YOU for the information. I have referred back to it about 5 times now (and I am guessing I will be back a couple dozen more in the future)

    One question, how do you feel about polls? We have started putting out polls for massage therapists to answer - trying to get them involved - it seems to be working so far.

    The Last Minute Massage Team
  • I haven't used on site polling, so I can't offer personal feedback on that; I do believe that getting information and feedback from your visitors in any way possible is a great idea.

    From what I've read, many bloggers have had great success with polling, others not so much. Every property is different; every community is different, so I say if you're compelled to do it...do it! See how it goes!

    I HAVE had a lot of great feedback on my surveys, which is a similar method. I have a survey on my blog right now, linked up in the sidebar. Visitors click over and answer a few questions about the site and give their feedback about what they like and what kind of articles they'd like to see in the future, etc. I do highly recommend using surveys on your site...they've helped me get a feel for what my visitors like and don't like and what direction I should steer the site.
  • I am new to this blog. It took me some to read all these.. Thank you for sharing Christian Russell :)
  • Mavelikara, thanks for joining us here! I hope you can always find time to stop by and read an article here. :)
  • Very thoughtful writing. You can guess how compulsive it was that while reading in Google Reader, I came here to leave a comment.
    No matter, if someone is launching a new blog or has an old blog. These tips will help anyone to grow the readership and be a successful blogger.
    Best line I liked, "...may not come as quickly as you want, and there will be bumps in the road, and these are the reasons most of us fail. Not because we do not have what it takes. We just quit too soon, and it really is a shame."
    This is where most of the CAPABLE bloggers fail, because they quit too soon.

    I like the suggestion above, you can elaborate on these points and write a book about it.
    Thanks for these tips again...
    Cheers.
  • Thanks Anurag. I really believe that. A lot of good, talented people don't get the results they deserve just because they give up a little too soon. It takes work and diligence. I've found it to ALWAYS take longer than I want to get results, and it's ALWAYS worth it when you stick it out!
  • Christian, I really like your list good think I am doing most of this. One question if your a just starting out and only able to do this # 10 might be a challege at least to do a 100. I guess I will start with 10 and see if I can consistently do that. I pretty much make it a point to do 1-2 hours a week on that activity not sure how many contact I hit.

    Guess I will start tracking that also now as I do agree every month I real make a point to build 1 or 2 new quality relation ships with fellow bloggers.
  • Jared - #10 can be intimidating...I'll be honest and say I am not successful at hitting this every single day, but if you seriously look at how much conversation is taking place in your niche every day...there is MORE than enough opportunity to make well over 100 contacts a day; it's mostly a matter of being creative and effective with your time...See, I just made another contact, and so did you :)
  • Jen - Blogging should be fun, no doubt. Thing is, getting huge results is fun too ;) I'm just old school that way. I started in business knocking on doors. That kind of work teaches you that you can always make whatever kind of money you need to make; you just need to be willing to do the work. No shortcuts; work hard, so you can play even harder!

    Tiffany - keeping the content going strong is a challenge to everyone from time to time. You have more to share than you may realize. Tap into what you LOVE about your business...take your blog in a new direction if you have to. Plus, I've always found help from my readers...ASK them what they want to hear about. Believe me, they'll tell you ;)

    Michael - The opportunity to share this space with you has absolutely made my day. I hope your readers find value in it; I can't thank you enough!
  • Christian, this was a great post! Thanks so much for your contribution here! :)
  • I've watched a few of your videos and read a couple of your blogs and find them extremely helpful. I write blogs often, I try to post them, once if not 3 or 4 times a week. I feel like I'm running out of ideas. Where do you get your inspiration from?

    Thanks,
    Tiffany
    Last Minute Massage
  • Jen
    Christian, thank you so much for reminding me again that I really should be doing ALL of the above.

    It is so tempting to just focus on the "fun" parts of blogging and ignoring the rest... I firmly believe that if you follow these simple rules you will be successful in the end but it is definitely a difficult journey.

    I like the point about the daily action plan best: it really helps to maintain momentum and to get into the routine of continuously working on my blog. Otherwise it is too easy to have a day off which turns into a few weeks of doing nothing much at all.

    Thanks so much, great reminder!
  • Lars - no doubt...you make a really great point that not only does making contacts everyday get your message out, build links, etc...but it also educates you at the same time. you rock!


    Robin - Yes! I look forward to the book as well...a lot of work ahead to get it out, but it will happen :) I appreciate the support!

    Christine - the daily action plan doesn't need to be complex, but having a schedule of tasks to keep is crucial. It keeps you on task and away from gettign sucked into things that aren't as important or productive. Keep at it and let me know how it goes :)
  • Thanks, Christian, for your follow up comment. Really useful! I will indeed let you know how I get on.
  • Looking forward to it!
  • This is a really useful post, Christian. The first point spoke volumes to me: write a daily action plan. I find it too easy to float around doing lots of Really Useful Things and find that I'm being unproductive. I know that when I write lists of things to do I can get really focused and then brilliant things happen. I haven't really applied this to my blog yet and am going to immediately!!
  • Thanks, Christian. Great list and easy to grab-and-go. I look forward to your book.

    Best, Robin
  • Hi Christian,

    Thanks for some great info. Top 3 for me here I think is the daily action plan (so much easier to get the other 9 done), having content readily available, and the power of hundred. The last one especially as I learn so much by reading and commenting on blogs because it means you need to really read it, as well as having a meaningful response.

    I'll take this 10 tips with me. Thanks for a great post and som good links :)

    All the best,
    Lars-Christian
  • Phil - I hope it helps your company and your personal blog as well. Best of luck!

    Sarah - Yes, it's so easy to get overwhelmed. It's cool you have direct sales experience; that's the world I come from as well. "Real world business" and "internet business" are a lot more alike than many realize :)

    Reba - you're right...customize the 100 as needed. The point is to push yourself. If you want full time results, you need a full time effort, but starting small is the absolute beauty of working online. You can start on any scale and take it to any level you want.

    Jackie and Cindy - The 100 rule is intimidating at first. I encourage you to push and see what results you get. It is difficult. It is worth it! I am not successful every day at getting it done. Pushing for it really helps you prioritize your business however :)

    Easton - self-sustaining beast! I love it! yes, it takes much nourishment to raise such a beast!

    Rich - I hope it helps! Thanks for the feedback.

    Todd - Yes! the 60 days without tweaking is tough sometimes! But focusing on people really does get results!

    Jesse - The book is in the works, really ;)

    Dave - "that which you do most is that which you do best"...couldn't have said it better myself. bravo!
  • This is a good guest post. Hell it's a good post. Great tips for newbies. I just twittered it.
  • Awesome post!

    I would add that HABITS are important. Start good ones. Even if that means "10 minutes a day reading other blogs" or your 100 connections rule - that which you do most is that which you do best.

    Thanks for boiling this down to 10 really good ones. Cheers!

    Dave
  • Great Post!

    I think you could turn those tips into chapters and write a book based off this single post. Def a great read, thanks!
  • Thanks, Christian. Great post! I love that 60 days without tweaking your site idea. I have noticed when I pay less attention to my site and more attention to networking my sales go up! I'm going to try your 100 contacts a day idea. It's a big task for sure, but I really see the value of it.
  • Those old Chinese know best. "...the journey owns you.”

    This structural order plan is most helpful. we have been doing some of them and now have some new tricks to add to our bag. Great article.
  • Um, I meant great list Christian. :) Thanks MM for hosting this conversation.
  • A lot of these tips work really great for relaunching an existing blog as well. Great list Michael. Love the pic - I assume that's the Salt Flats?

    Never get discouraged, never stop working. You have to be consistent and relentless. Blogs grow little by little, for the most part. When you get a spike in traffic or attention, remember that it's fleeting. Takes time and devotion to turn the thing into a self-sustaining beast.
  • Absolutely love #10. 100 contacts per day seems like a gigantic hurdle, but imagine the power!

    Now if only I hadn't missed this all important part: "You’ve come up with a great idea. You’ve done your research."
  • Great Post. Being a new comer to the Blogging scene, I found this information to be really helpful. While 100 connections a day may be a little steep for me at the moment, you have given me food for thought.
    Thanks Again
  • Thanks for sharing, this is fantastic information. Your starting paragraphs really caught my attention. I can't help but believe that I always quit *just* before I hit the success mark, and I never know just how close I got.

    My fav tips are # 1 - daily action, in small increments, done over and over and over and over.

    # 10 - this is a fantastic tip but may have to be scaled back for someone who works full-time. I'm going to try 100 personal contacts a WEEK. When I get to the point that online work IS my full-time job, I'll move that to 100 a DAY.

    Thanks again.
  • Reba,

    The number isn't as important as the daily. If you say 100 contacts per WEEK, you may find yourself pushing off the 100 until saturday hits you smack in the face.

    Check a box off everyday, even if it is only 5-10 people in that box. The daily routine is the key, and the number is arbitrary.
  • This is such a great list Christian - especially for beginners who are completely overwhelmed by all they *think* they should be doing. Reducing it down to these 10 makes is so much easier to stay focused and get the job done. I especially like the "100 contacts a day". I used to coach leaders in direct sales and this was one of my cornerstone recommendations. It makes a HUGE difference! Thanks for sharing your wisdom.
  • We have websites and a blog at our company but I have just started my personal blog. This is the sort of good, useful help that I needed - thank you so much..

    Phil
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