May 26

There are basically two types of bloggers in the world - reporters and experts - and some people perform both roles (usually the experts, it’s hard for reporters to become experts, but it’s easy for experts to report).

If you have ever taken an Internet marketing course or attended a seminar specifically for beginners, you have probably heard about the two different methodologies. Whenever the business model is based on content, and if you blog for money then the model is based on content, people are taught to either start as reporters, or if possible step up as experts.

I’ll be frank; you want to be the expert.

Reporters leverage the content of the experts and in most cases people start off as reporters because they haven’t established expertise. Experts enjoy the perks of preeminence, higher conversion rates because of perceived value, it’s easier to get publicity, people are more likely to seek you out rather than you having to seek others out, joint ventures come easier, etc… experts in most cases simply make more money and attract more attention.

Most Bloggers Are Reporters

The thing with expertise is that it requires something - experience. No person becomes an expert without doing things and learning. Bloggers usually start out without expertise and as a result begin their blogging journey by talking about everything going on in their niche (reporting) and by interviewing and talking about other experts (reporting again).

There’s nothing wrong with reporting of course and for many people it’s a necessity at first until you build up some expertise. Unfortunately the ratios are pretty skewed when it comes to reporters and experts - there are a lot more reporters than there are experts, hence reporters tend to struggle to gain attention and when they do, they often just enhance the reputation of the expert they are reporting on.

Don’t Replicate Your Teacher

If you have ever spent some time browsing products in the learn Internet marketing niche you will notice a pattern. Many people first study Internet marketing from a “guru” (for lack of a better term). The guru teaches how he or she is able to make money online, and very often the view that the student gleams is that in order to make money online you have to teach others how to make money online.

The end result of this process is a huge army of amateurs attempting to replicate what their teacher does in the same industry - the Internet marketing industry - not realizing that without expert status based on a proven record and all the perks that come with it, it’s next to impossible to succeed.

Even people, who enjoy marginal success, say for example growing an email list of 1,000 people, then go out and launch a product about how to grow an email list of 1,000 people. Now I have no problems with that, I think it’s fine to teach beginners and leverage whatever achievements you have, the problem is that people gravitate to the same niche - Internet marketing - and rarely have any key points of differentiation.

How many products out there do you know of that all claim to teach the same things - email marketing, SEO, pay per click, affiliate marketing, and all the sub-niches that fall under the category of Internet marketing. It’s a saturated market, yet when you see your teachers and other gurus making money teaching others how to make money (and let’s face it - making money as a subject is one of the most compelling) - your natural inclination is to follow in their footsteps.

If the key is to become an expert and you haven’t spent the last 5-10 years making money online, I suggest you look for another niche to establish expertise in.

Report on Your Process, Not Others

The secret to progress from reporter to expert is not to focus on other experts and instead report on your own journey. When you are learning how to do something and implementing things day by day, or studying other people’s work, you need to take your process and what you do as a result of what you learn, and use it as content for your blog.

It’s okay to talk about experts when you learn something from them, but always relate it to what you are doing. If you learn a technique from an expert it’s fine to state you learned it from them (and affiliate link to their product too!) but you should then take that technique, apply it to what you are doing and then report back YOUR results, not there’s. Frame things using your opinion - your stories - and don’t regurgitate what the expert said. The key is differentiation and personality, not replication.

Expertise comes from doing things most people don’t do and then talking about it. If you do this often enough you wake up one day as an expert, possibly without even realizing how it happened, simply because you were so good at reporting what you did.

You Are Already An Expert

Most people fail to become experts (or perceived as experts) because they don’t leverage what they already know. Every person who lives a life learns things as they go, takes action every day and knows something about something. The reason why they never become an expert is because they choose not to (which is fine for some, not everyone wants to be an expert), but if your goal is to blog your way to expertise and leave the world of reporting behind you have to start teaching and doing so by leveraging real experience.

Experience can come from what you do today and what you have done previously; you just need to take enough steps to demonstrate what you already know and what you are presently learning along your journey. I know so many people in my life, who are experts simply by virtue of the life they have lived, yet they are so insecure about what they know, they never commit their knowledge to words for fear of…well fear.

Blogs and the Web in general, are amazing resources when you leverage them as a communication tool to spread your expertise because of the sheer scope of people they can reach. If all you ever do is talk to people in person and share your experience using limited communication mediums, you haven’t much hope of becoming an expert. Take what you know and show other people through blogging, and you might be surprised how people change their perception of you in time.

Reporting Is A Stepping Stone

If your previous experience and expertise is from an area you want to leave behind or you are starting from “scratch”, then reporting is the path you must walk, at least for the short term.

Reporting is a lot of fun. Interviewing experts, talking about what other people are doing and just being part of a community is not a bad way to blog. In many cases people make a career of reporting (journalism is about just that), but if you truly want success and exponential results, at some point you will have to stand up and proclaim yourself as someone unusually good at something and then proceed to demonstrate it over and over again.

Have patience and focus on what you do to learn and then translate that experience into lessons for others, and remember, it’s okay to be a big fish in a small pond, that’s all most experts really are.

This article was by Yaro Starak, a professional blogger and my blog mentor. He is the leader of the Blog Mastermind mentoring program designed to teach bloggers how to earn a full time income blogging part time.

To get more information about Blog Mastermind click this link:

www.BlogMastermind.com

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Jan 28

Like many bloggers, I am a member of BlogRush, a free blog syndication service. I have the widget on this blog and a couple of other blogs.

What is BlogRush?

It’s a free service you sign up for at blogrush.com and then you submit the blogs you would like syndicated in the widget you and other bloggers must place on your blogs. It is labeled “Blogosphere”. The blogosphere is the blogging world.

To submit your blog, first you go to their site, get a free account, enter your blog’s URL, RSS feed and pick a category to match its content as closely as you can. Then you must place a widget on your blog and wait for approval.

Once approved, the widget goes live and you host about 5 post titles of other bloggers in your widget, and your titles are syndicated throughout the network through other people’s widgets on their blogs.

If your blog isn’t approved, you’re asked to remove the widget from your blog.

The approval process is supposed to insure that only “quality” blogs are available, and that they are in English. I’ve read some of what the BlogRush people consider quality, and it’s not what I would consider quality. Some blogs are of extremely good quality as well. I just don’t see consistency about what BlogRush claims to be a quality blog.

I also have little idea why some of my blogs were approved and some were not. No reasons are given when a blog is approved. Some of the reasons given in the rejection emails are not enough recent posts or too much advertising, which I can clearly understand. But some of the other reasons were very fuzzy.

When you go to the BlogRush site to find out what their quality criteria are, they don’t really give you a clear idea on what they will judge your blog. You just have to submit it and wait to see if it’s approved.

How is BlogRush Working for Me?

I’m going to be blunt. Not very well at all. My titles are syndicated a few hundred to a few thousand times per day or week, and I get extremely few click-throughs.

One thing that could cause this is my post titles could be too boring to attract readers, and that’s entirely possible. I’m not the best marketer in the world and I’m sure all my blog post titles could use sprucing up, but they’re not that bad.

Another thing that could be causing this is people don’t go to other blogs very often through the BlogRush widget, meaning it’s a crummy way of syndicating your blog.

What is My Conclusion?

I’m going with the second reason, BlogRush is not such a good syndication method. Here’s why I think that.

  • I have several subscribers to all of my blogs through RSS readers and email, including the one I have for sale and have not posted to for months.
  • I get several hundred to a few thousand visitors per month to each of my blogs through direct traffic, other social networking sites and search engines.

If BlogRush were such a good syndication method, I should also be getting a proportionally similar number of visitors from other bloggers’ widgets. But I’m not, and it’s not even in the same ball park.

I also have no idea if other bloggers are experiencing the same thing. I’m sure the big name blogs are getting plenty of visitors through the widget through name recognition of their blogs. But I seriously wonder about the rest of us.

Why other Social Networking Sites are Better

Other social networking sites seem to be much better at separating the wheat from the chaff in the blogosphere. Posts are submitted by readers and authors and voted on by readers when they give a specific post a digg or thumbs up (or down) or a vote of some kind on a social networking site.

A vote from the readers is much more important to me than an approval stamp by one website. It also seems to be much more important to the search engines.

I am evaluating whether to keep my BlogRush account over the next few months. The widget takes up critical sidebar virtual real estate I could be using more productively. So if you see the BlogRush widgets disappear, you’ll know what I decided.

What is your experience with BlogRush? Please leave comments and let us all know how or whether it’s working for you.

Sherri
On BlogRush

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Dec 23

Those orange RSS buttons are all over everywhere on the web nowadays.

What is RSS?

RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication. It works by allowing you to subscribe to a website or blog (feed) in an RSS reader just by clicking the button.

The technology is also what allows your anti-virus software and iTunes software to update automatically without you having to do anything to make it happen, other than keep up your subscriptions to your services.

What is an RSS Reader?

An RSS reader is a software program that allows you to subscribe to any feed by entering the feed web address (URL) into your reader of choice. Blogs, most news sites and some static websites have RSS feeds along with iTunes and sites offering subscription services of just about every flavor imaginable.

There are dozens of readers available online including:

  • Bloglines
  • Google Feedfetcher
  • MagpieRSS (http://plagger.org/)
  • Firefox Live Bookmarks
  • Yahoo (to name a few)

You pick one and get a free account. Login to your account and start clicking the RSS buttons on the pages from which you want to receive a live feed.

You can download feeds to your computer, too.

Why should you use RSS?

New content is delivered to the reader automatically as it’s generated and you access it when you want to read, listen to, or watch your subscription content. It beats email because you go to it when you have the time rather than having it come to you in a sea of other email.

However, most RSS feeds are easily subscribed to by email, and those who really want to make it easy for you to get their feed offer an email subscription option. This leaves the choice of how you receive your content completely up to you, the user.

Where did RSS come from?

From what I’ve been able to gather, it was created somewhat simultaneously by David Winer (Berkmann Center for Internet and Society) and Netscape back in 1997, but wasn’t user-friendly until its release to the public in December 2000 as RSS 1.0. Since then, other formats for easily subscribing to site feeds have arrived on the scene, like Atom. RSS is getting to be the standard as time passes.

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written by joubess

Dec 09

I decided just a little while ago that Blog Mastermind is something that will help me increase my online income, improve my blogging and writing skills, and help me grow my blogs into real businesses. If you’re interested in a free report on earning a living blogging  you can download it here: Blog Profits Blueprint. It’s a pdf file and definitely worth the time to read it.

The thing that pushed me off the fence was the most recent video Yaro Starak released to promote Blog Mastermind. He reviews a student’s blog and makes suggestions for improving readability and for getting the blog from being stuck at a static number of subscribers to growing the number of subscribers again. It’s just under 20 minutes long and provides a wealth of information that anyone could use to improve his or her own blog without subscribing.

The thing that got me from a solid “no” to up on the fence was Yaro’s release of the free lesson, number 11. I watched the video and read along in the text and found a great deal of information that I am definitely interested in.

I’ve already paid for the Immediate Edge and Wealthy Affiliate for December, so I don’t have to decide which one I’ll drop for a couple of weeks. That will give me enough time to review the offerings of each program and make a thoughtful decision.

Tutoring is a little crazy right now because mid-term exams are coming up the week of December 17th, and many of my students are scheduling extra sessions along with regular sessions, so I have very little time over the next 11 days to do much else.

Since Blog Mastermind lessons are fairly compact (right about an hour), I feel I can manage one lesson a week or every few days even with such a busy tutoring schedule, depending on how often he sends new lessons. They come by email so you can’t skip ahead.

I’ll keep you updated on the lessons as they arrive. I won’t be divulging proprietary content, of course, but I will be writing about how the lessons are helping me improve my blogs and my income.

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written by joubess

Dec 04

After the Thirty Day Challenge, I began working on two paid membership programs to take my internet marketing to the next level.

The first program I began working with is Wealthy Affiliate. I’m in the midst of their training program. It’s an 8 week self-paced program.

The second program is The Immediate Edge from the creators of the Thirty Day Challenge. I’m much more lost in this program than Wealthy Affiliate, but it is packed. Every time I go to the site to read I learn so much.

These are two entirely different programs and each provides a great deal of information directed in different ways to learn to make money with internet marketing.

There is so much information, I’m still overwhelmed. But as time goes on I’m getting adjusted to the huge amount of information and able to process it better. When I get really overwhelmed I stop reading new material and go back over previous material until I feel I understand it. Then I go ahead and read new material again. Sometimes I stop and implement some of what I’ve learned before going back to learning new material and studying.

I’m also considering Yaro Starak’s Blog Mastermind subscription learning program on blogging for income, which is what I do most of all. But I only have until the end of December 9th to decide whether or not to join. If I join I’ll have to give something else up, most likely The Immediate Edge. Or I’ll give up both that and Wealthy Affiliate.

The biggest thing I seem to lack in my online earning efforts is focus. I start a bunch of projects or start to implement some ideas but never give any of them sufficient attention or effort to make them successful.

As I’ve given my scarce attention resources a thorough thinking over, I find The Immediate Edge is beyond me right now and I’m not sure I will benefit from it anytime soon. At least not soon enough to continue to spend money on it monthly. I only have so much time to devote to my online earnings and I’m not interested in a ton of research and continuously doing long-tail niche market projects and building a ton of websites. I want to build some blogs that I can truly devote time and effort to making the best they can be instead of using the shotgun approach and shooting in a large number of directions hoping to hit something. Wealthy Affiliate isn’t turning out to be what I thought. I do plan to complete the 8 week training course before I make a final decision on whether or not to keep that subscription.

Of the 4 sites I built as a result of the Thirty Day Challenge, I’m stuck on one completely and getting bored with another one. So two of my seven blogs just aren’t floating my boat and I’ll have to think hard and be very creative to keep adding fresh content to those sites.

Fortunately, the other 5 hold a great deal of passion for me and adding fresh content and keeping them active is relatively easy. This is one of those sites. I’m considering selling the two blogs I’m not doing much with, or at least selling the one I’m stuck on for more and better content.

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written by joubess