Sunday, January 27, 2013
Five Things Great Photography Will Do For Your Blog
Five Things Great Photography Will Do For Your Blog
A blog is important for almost any business with a heavy online presence. You know that photographs are an important element of any blog, but do you know how important? Here are five things that great photography can do for your blog.
Make Your Blog Look Professional
The worst thing you can do to your blog is make it look amateurish. Of course, oftentimes people are amateurs when it comes to website and blog design. That is why it’s a good idea to hire a professional, so that your blog will look professional, too. The quality of your photography will affect the appearance of your blog significantly. Your blog won’t look professional if the photography is low quality, which is why it’s so important to make sure all the elements of your blog are of the same caliber.
Impress Your Readers
In reality, the content of your blog is more important than anything else. A good-looking blog with poor content won’t be highly regarded, and a poor-looking blog with superb content can still get a lot of credit. In order to impress your readers, you need great content, but it’s not only the written word that counts. Your photography also has to be great. With your photos, you have the chance to impress your readers through your visual insight and endeavors, and they’ll enjoy your blog even more because of it.
Attract New Readers
Great photography can make your readers stay, and it can also bring new readers to your blog. The aesthetics of something give us the first impression of whether we like it or not. With great photography, new visitors will be more apt to stay and check out the rest of your blog, by taking the time to read your great content. If your photography is poor, you might scare off new visitors immediately by giving a bad first impression. Great photography can help increase your readership.
Clearly Illustrate Your Points
When you write about something in your blog, your intention is, of course, to get your message across to your readers as clearly as possible. Your words can do a good job of that, but sometimes they’re not enough. Great photography can help illustrate your points and really drive home the message of your posts. If your post is a how-to, for example, or talking about a specific item or place, photographs can help your readers learn and imagine what you’re saying in a visual way. They improve every post.
Enhance the Image of Your Business
Finally, great photographs don’t just enhance the look of your blog. They can enhance the entire image of your business or brand. Visual branding is strong and significant, and you don’t want your brand to be associated with low-quality anything, and the photographs on your blog are part of the things you need to consider. When building your brand, remember that high-quality photographs on your blog will portray an image that your website is professional, and as a result your business will benefit, too.
Caroline Jones runs a successful restaurant business and provides tips on effective internet marketing that she says includes great photographs, and great photographs deserve a great photography WP theme.
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Does Blogging Help You as a Writer?
First, I have become a much faster writer. I don't mean typing speed (although that has probably improved also). I mean the speed that I can create content. In 2005, a 1000 word article would take me several hours, usually spread over several days. Now I can knock out 2000 or 3000 words in a single sitting. On some days, I will write two blog posts (for different blogs) and do a couple thousand words of fiction writing.
Second, because I tried so hard in the beginning to keep consistent with my posting schedule (which I am awful at now), I would find spare moments to write. I had a new baby and a full-time job as well as all the other "things" that tend to crop up on a daily basis. You learn to write when you can or you don't write.
Finally, my skill as a writer has vastly improved. When was the last time you worried about conjunctions and participles? Yeah, me too. But, as you write, you use grammar checkers (I highly recommend Grammarly Lite for online editing), read writing books, visit writing web sites, etc. From those, you just kind of absorb the rules.
So, does blogging help your writing? I certainly think so. What do you think?
LewisC
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Who should blog?
Blogging is good for all of those. All you need to do is sit down and start writing. Look around this blog for getting started. I am going to be writing a bunch of tutorials and getting started guides in the near future.
The best part of blogging is how many people you can virtually meet from around the world. One blog I write has many people from China. It's a tech blog and I guess that particular tech is popular in China. That is so cool.
I'm serious. Any topic that you can think of has someone blogging about it. Why not you? Check out the video below.
What is RSS and What does it do?
Rather than go into detail about the composition of an RSS Feed, I will just give you some links that you can refer to.
For an encyclopedic answer, you can visit the RSS entry on WikiPedia. For the technophile, you can see details and history at XML.Com's entry on RSS. For a very brief FAQ with additional links, see What is RSS.
Now for my explanation. RSS is an acronym. Don't worry about what the acronym means. It's not important. An RSS Feed is a text file that contains data in a special format. Like a word document or an excel document, an RSS can be read, and is meaningful, to programs that understand that special format.
For Blog Readers

An RSS Reader allows you to subscribe to all of your favorite blogs and see when the writer updates without having to actually navigate to each blog. It's like a little browser that goes out and checks for new blog entries for you.
The benefit of using RSS is that it saves you time. There are so many good blogs out there, not many people have enough time every day to go check on each and every one of them. It's especially annoying to keep checking on a blog that you really like and it not being updated as frequently as you would like. Get an RSS reader and let it tell you when the blog has been updated.
For Bloggers
An RSS Feed is built from your blog. Most blog hosting providers, like blogger.com or wordpress, will generate an RSS Feed for you. You can choose how much information goes into your feed. You can choose headlines only, headlines and summaries or full posts.
People disagree on what is best to put into your feed. My suggestion it to do what ever you prefer. It really all comes down to personal choice for any particular individual. I choose to use full feeds as I want my readers to be able to read my entire post as easily as possible.
Summary
So what is an RSS Feed for? Just what I mentioned above. People can subscribe to my feed, using an RSS reader, and see my posts almost as soon as I write them. They don't need to keep coming back to see if I have updated. It's a time saver for my readers. I also offer email subscriptions for the same reason.
blog blogging rss feed
Thursday, March 12, 2009
New Blog Editor - Blog From Your Phone
I am always looking for ways to be productive while on the go. One of the reasons that I quit updating this blog as frequently as I used to was that I started traveling so much and spending so much time in traffic, I just didn't have time to keep up with all the things I need to do.
I have tried to blog using my phone's browser by connecting to the online blog entry page. That is incredibly painful. Scrolling up and down, trying to click on buttons, zooming in and out; it was a lesson in frustration. Now, I have finally found a tool that allows me to blog, with ease, from my blackberry (although I do have one issue that prevents me from using it on this blog).
The new tool is called BlogLive and it's from a company called imoblive. It runs on BlackBerry and Symbian (and may run on other j2me platforms). You can view the entire list of supported devices.
Some of the product features (from the publisher web site):
- Supports multiple blog accounts
- Efficiently create, edit and delete posts
- User library support for frequently used words and phrases
- Advanced text editor: Easily insert text URL, online image in your posts, without having to enter any HTML codes
- Supports major online mobile systems including the Blogger, WordPress, Movable Type, TypePad, and MetaWeblog API for compatibility with a most blog sites
You can see from the screen shot above that it does in fact support multiple accounts. From the menu, you select Add to add a new account. One the new account screen, you enter your connection and XMLRPC information. You can select from a list of blog types.
I was able to get it publishing for my wordpress blogs but I could not get it to work with Blogger no matter what I did. I think I may have the Xml-Rpc link wrong but I can't find any definitive information for the right link. I used the link that is in my Zoundry Raven blog editor but that didn't work either. If you use this editor and get it working with blogger, please let me know. I would love to get this working.
Once you have it configured, it is a nice, if simple, editor. Select New Article and then start writing.
If you are going to be entering URLs or images, you might want to use the Advanced Editor. You get a nice large screen as well as some additional options for input. It is still a manual process but I hope they make this even easier over time.
It also has a spell checker. One of the nicer features is the User Library. In that library, you can add often used snippets of text. Footers, common links, signatures, etc. Open the library, select your snippet and it's added to your post.
The editor costs $17.99 and that price includes a free year of upgrades. Support seems to be minimal; I can't find any beyond an email address. There is a FAQ but it doesn't even mention BlogLive.
Still, even with its issues, I find it to be a nice product. I will wait and see how often it gets upgraded before purchasing it and I want to work out the blogger issue. If I can get it to work with Blogger, I will probably buy it.
Let me know if you use and what platform you use it with. If you get it working with Blogger.com, please, please, let me know.
A funny note. When my spell checker hit XMLRPC, it came up with SMALLPOX as a replacement. I have often thought the same. ;-)
Thanks,
LewisC
Technorati : blackberry, blog, blogging, bloglive, client, editor, mobile, remote
Saturday, February 28, 2009
Feedburner.com shuts down
I logged into my feedburner.com account and was welcomed with a message that I had to move my feeds from feedburner.com to feedburner.google.com. It listed all of my blogs and a link to move them. It gives the opportunity to create a google account if you don't already have one. I was already signed and that's where I wanted them so I hit the button.
All of my feeds are now hosted in the google data center. I guess I should feel safer. ;-)
If you haven't logged into your feedburner account in a while, you probably should: More details on moving to a Google account
On February 28th, if you have not moved your feeds to a Google Account, the traffic to your feeds will not be cut off or terminated, but you will not be able to view or manage your feeds until you have moved to a Google Account, unless you use MyBrand. Technically, this means that all traffic will now be served out of our Google data centers, and there will still be a way to move your account that will be in place indefinitely.
You will not be able to log back into your feedburner account once you move your feeds. Then again, you won't need to. I've read some people complain about the move but I have been satisfied with the various services I've used from google so I don't mind it. My biggest hope is that the intermittent interruptions will be fixed now that feedburner has really been moved to a google data center.
LewisC
Technorati : feedburner, rss, subscription
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Use Blogger or Install a Blog on Your Own Site?
I was recently asked this question:
Do you find that its beneficial to start a blog on the blogger platform versus installing it on your own site?
My opinion on this has changed in the last few months. I used to think that blogger or wordpress.com were "good enough". I now think you should host your own blog on your own domain. My only reason for this is the amount of control you have by doing so.
I have started several new blogs (on tech topics) on my own domains. I chose wordpress a my blog software. The number of plug ins that help me format and control my blogs is amazing. I don't want to spend a lot of time tweaking and with these plug ins, it's mostly install and move on.
NOTE: Don't confuse wordpress with wordpress.com. Wordpress is a blogging package (that you can get from wordpress.org). Wordpress.com is a hosting service that uses wordpress as it's blogging software. You can use wordpress the software on your own domain and if you chose wordpress.com as your blogging provider, you will be using wordpress the software (and can ONLY use wordpress the software).
From talking to family, friends, peers and co-workers, I don't think most people care about the domain being a custom domain or the blogspot domain. I have read some bloggers who feel that a custom domain gives you a certain amount of legitimacy that a blogspot or wordpress domain wouldn't. I don't agree.
So, the short answer is that if you want a very quick start up with no muss and no fuss, blogger (or one of the other hosted domains) is a perfectly fine choice. If however, you are like me and want the additional control, you should buy a domain and install your own blogging software. All of the major blogging packages are incredibly simple to install and most web hosters offer additional assistance in the option of cPanel and SimpleScripts.
LewisC