Feb 11 2011

Make Your Blog More Popular: Write For Friends

Category: Business & MarketingEthan G. Salwen @ 6:26 am

AfterCapture Blog_110211_Make Your Blog Popular_1

“There are lots of reasons why people flock to certain blogs, but I think one of the most important is that popular blogs are written by popular people — the sort of people who attract others.”

This is from Dean Rieck’s “The 7 Secrets of Running a Wildly Popular Blog”, and it shows — go figure! — that I was totally on track when I mused that Chase Jarvis’ blog is so damn popular because Chase Jarvis is so damn popular.

It’s the Quality of Visitors, Not Quantity

Reick’s popularity-building advice for bloggers includes “Have a conversation,” “Lighten up,” “Help people” and “Stop trying so hard.” This is all good stuff. However. . .

Notice that while these strategies can make your blog more enjoyable, they will not actually make you more popular  — not in the real-life, flesh-and-blood world.

Regarding Jarvis I noted:

In person, Jarvis is more charismatic than most photographers will ever be (or would want to be).

This is true, and my point is simple: In blogging, just as in real life, it’s not the quantity of interaction that matters, it’s the quality.

If your blog is an enjoyable destination that honestly presents your work, skills and personality, it will prove invaluable as a portfolio and marketing tool — as a “landing pad” for potential customers. And that is worth a lot more than any number of “hits.”

Unless you’re Madonna or Lady Gaga, you don’t need people worshiping you. You need people interacting with you. You need people interested in using your services. You need to make connections with real people who can expand your creative and professional horizons.

If your blog readership goes from zero to 10, that’s great! If you end up with 50 regular followers, that’s awesome! If you have 200 hundred people who stop by once in a while, that is un-freakin’-believable!

Blog for Your Friends & Family & Most-Likable Clients

The key to taking advantage of Rieck’s advice on blogging (or my advice on improving your blog writing style) is to blog as if you are addressing, in person, the people you actually know and like, or who you would like to know — personally.

There’s an important difference between Rieck’s intended audience and the intended audience of this blog. I’m assuming that you don’t need to create a “widely popular blog.” You are not in the business of writing a professional blog; you are in the business of professional photography. Don’t forget this.

The best way to reach out to these potential customers through blogging is to write content for a specific, real audience of friends, family members and the clients you most enjoy working with.

Yes, “family and friends” sounds cliché, and if you hate your family, um, keep them them out of the equation. But if you only write for potential clients (abstractions of your imagination) your blogging will fall flat.

So read Reick’s advice and work to make your blog more popular (for friends, family and real-world clients), but don’t try to make a blog that is widely popular (just for the sake of being popular).

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Feb 04 2011

Better Blog Writing: Let Copyblogger Be Your Coach

Category: Business & MarketingEthan G. Salwen @ 4:01 am

AfterCapture Blog_110204_Copyblogger_1-1Blogging is a no where near as easy as taking great snap snots with a Canon S95.

The biggest blogging hurdle most photographers face is the four-letter word called “writing.” Most photographers find writing for publication difficult and scary. And blogging is publishing.

Don’t get me wrong. The technology of blogging is easy — just click “Publish.” And blogging just for fun — posting those vacation pics for folks back home — aint hard. But if you are photographer blogging in connection with professional efforts, you will likely face unexpected challenges, even if you’re mainly out to have fun.

No doubt you’ve heard that writing a blog post is as easy as writing an email. Hah! Good blogging requires approaching writing thoughtfully and, dang-it!, you don’t have a personal blog writing coach. What to do?

AfterCapture Blog_110204_Copyblogger_2Sign Up for a Daily Dose of Copyblogger

I always recommend that photographers jumping into (or stuck in) the blogosphere sign up for the daily email from Copyblogger. A premiere resource for crafting blog content, Copyblogger will dish you up fantastic writing tips, from how to manage writer’s block to how to write in an SEO-friendly manner.

Three Posts that Prove Copyblogger’s Is a Great Writing Coach:

11 Smart Tips for Brilliant Writing

Four Steps to Finding Your Ideal Writing Voice

7 Tips for an Authentic and Productive Writing Process.

Picking and Chosing from a Mixed Bag

Be warned: lots of the material published on Copyblogger is not geared for photographers trying to build a fan base. One content theme relates to making direct sales online, like 101 Ways to Make More Sales Online, and this likely won’t be of interest.

Some Copyblogger content will fascinate some photographers and bore others, like 50 Can’t-Fail Techniques for Finding Great Blog Topics.

This is why I suggest signing up for the email. More often than not you will want to just hit “Delete” and get on with your day. But every week or three Copyblogger will dish you up a gem that will improve your blog posts, which will make your professional blogging more successful and enjoyable, if not easy. Your professional focus your blogging voice and effort and your understanding of how to better project your presence into the blogosphere.

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Dec 20 2010

Judy Herrmann Proves that Blog Header Photographs Can Rock

Category: Business & Marketing, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 3:01 pm

AfterCapture Blog_101219_Best Picture 2011_1_2 Good Things_1

If you’ve tried to customize a blog header with one of your images, you know it aint easy. We are not used to making (or seeing) photographs as short, wide rectangles. Also, blog headers need to pop off the screen to arrest our attention, and yet not overwhelm the blog’s content. Most challenging: how to share our blog’s message into one, single image?

For her new 2 Good Things website, Judy Herrmann has succeeded in creating the best image for a blog header that I have ever seen. This rockin’ image draws us in, but it doesn’t overpower. Most important, it speaks wonderfully to both the content and the emotional thrust of the site. This is amazing branding with a single, 940 x 200 pixel image. (To better understand the message, see the site’s “Why 2 good things?” and “What’s up with the V sign?”)

See It In Context

AfterCapture Blog_101219_Best Picture 2011_1_2 Good Things_2Definitely head to 2 Good Things to see how this image works in conjunction with the blog’s layout. It looks better in context than it does on its own. And that’s how it should be: photograph and site design complimenting each other. The in-focus fingers draw us to the left, to the posts, while the out-of-focus face rests nicely above the categories and other links. The image has a surprising amount of depth for the restraints of its dimensions, and this welcomes us to the site, as does the positive energy from the out-of-focus face.

Where Did It Come From?

Having not yet spoken with Judy about the image, I can’t be sure that this is Judy we are seeing in the photograph, nor who made the photograph. (Perhaps it was captured by her life and business partner, Mike Starke). I suppose that this might even be a stock image, used very intelligently. But I doubt it. Even out of focus, this looks like Judy — the hair, the friendly energy in the eyes.

Less important than who the model is, I’m totally convinced that Judy orchestrated this image very specifically for this site. I can see her coming up with a strong concept and then playing around with captures until she got one that works just right for the space. This process would make sense. Judy is a commercial photographer dedicated to solving visual problems for her clients very specific needs. So why shouldn’t she do the same for her own blog?

So, Judy, am I right? Is this you, and did I envision your image-making process correctly. Any thoughts you want to share on making this best-ever blog header image?

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Dec 17 2010

New Media Blogging Inspiration from Chase Jarvis

Category: Business & Marketing, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 8:14 am

AfterCapture Blog_101217_Chase Jarvis Blog_1Chase Jarvis is an über popular commercial photographer, and his New Media-savvy blogging is a key ingredient to his marketing and self-promotion efforts — although “effort” is not the right word. Javis blogs for the pure love of it, and his love of blogging is critical to his success with blogging. Blogging is not a chore for Jarvis, nor something he does in a calculated manner to increase his hits. Jarvis’ number of hits keep increasing because he’s eager to speak to a popular audience, and because he has something that audience wants to hear.

If you are not familiar with Jarvis’ blog, definitely take a thoughtful tour — even if Jarvis’ photography (or personality) don’t float your boat.

New Media Blogging?

I know. “New Media blogging” seems repetitive. After all, blogging is about as New Media as you can get, right? Actually, blogging is just a tool — a simple way to post content to the Web — and most of us Dead Tree Bloggers do not fully embrace the New Media spirit. Two critical ways Jarvis does is to:

• Constantly link out to peer content. Jarvis does much more than add SEO-friendly links to his posts; he features content from other creative professionals. This is good for him. In the blogosphere, the more you link out, the more people link back in.

• Makes the blogging experience interactive. This is no easy task: to make people feel involved in your blogging. One way Jarvis does so is by enticing people to comment on his posts, and then rewarding them with follow-up responses.

Popular in Flesh, Popular in the Blogosphere

Don’t try to imitate the way Jarvis blogs. Jarvis is Jarvis. You are You. The key to Jarvis’ blogging is that it is honest.

In person, Jarvis is more charismatic than most photographers will ever be (or would want to be). Jarvis once told me Continue reading “New Media Blogging Inspiration from Chase Jarvis”

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Jul 21 2010

Should Photographers Learn HTML and CSS?

Category: Technology InsightsEthan G. Salwen @ 11:31 am

Even if you are not a reporter, as a modern photographer you very likely consider yourself an “independent publisher/producer,” and so the flowchart posted yesterday on 10,000 Words will be of interest.

AfterCapture Blog_100721_shouldilearnprogramming-sm

According to this chart, if you don’t want to spend nights crying over your keyboard, you should not learn programming. On the other hand, if you want to build Web sites, you should learn HTML and CSS. This seems about right to me, and it points to the fact that, these days:

1. The act of building Web sites can be as simple as lightly customizing a blog template (theme), which can seriously help photographers in self-publishing images, photo stories and multimedia projects.

2. Most people do not consider basic HTML and CSS serious programming.

Few photographers will want to or will need to learn Continue reading “Should Photographers Learn HTML and CSS?”

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Jun 24 2009

SEO on Steroids: A Web of Blogs

Category: Business & MarketingEthan G. Salwen @ 11:42 am

ACMF_NG_082I bet you a hundred bucks if you run a search using the words “las vegas headshots,” the number one result will be the blog of photographer Wayne Wallace, who, um, is based in Las Vegas, Nevada. He does shoot headshots but his range is much greater, covering fashion, editorial and commercial as well. And if you run searches for these services in the LV area, Wallace keeps popping up. What’s going on?

What’s going on is that Wallace has a background in computers and marketing and so when he broke into photography a few years ago Continue reading “SEO on Steroids: A Web of Blogs”

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Feb 16 2009

A Blogging Book To Avoid

Category: Books, Technology InsightsEthan G. Salwen @ 11:47 am

ACMF_NG_017I try to avoid writing reviews of books I don’t deem worthy of reading. But I feel that it is important to steer you away from Scott McNulty’s “Building a WordPress Blog People Want To Read.”

McNulty is one of the few people actually earning a living blogging, and he is certainly an expert on the topic, having a wealth of information to share. But that wealth is not shared well in “Building a WordPress Blog.” The book definitely contains valuable tidbits, but this information is Continue reading “A Blogging Book To Avoid”

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Jan 21 2009

Auto Surf for Quick & Easy Blog Inspiration

Category: Business & Marketing, Creative Process, Online ResourcesEthan G. Salwen @ 11:08 am

ACMF_NG_001One of the best ways to get ideas and inspirations for your own blog – from design to content – is to regularly surf the Blogosphere, especially the far corners that don’t relate directly to your interests.

I give out this excellent and basic advice all the time but, um, I have to admit that I have a hard time doing it myself. After all, who wants to click around to sites that don’t interest them in terms of content? It’s kind of like reading a book just because I “should.” Doesn’t happen.

Enter Condron.us. Go there now! You’ll love what you see, and you won’t need to read the rest of this post. Continue reading “Auto Surf for Quick & Easy Blog Inspiration”

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May 16 2008

Practical Strategies for Power Blogging

Category: Business & Marketing, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 7:02 am

ACMF_090516_1In my last post I offered resources for thinking about maintaining a blog in a fresh, innovative way to help you get the most out of this unprecedentedly powerful media for marketing your services. Now, let’s turn to some practical strategies that I gleaned from interviews with more than a dozen photographer power bloggers.

Personal, Creative Freedom with Clear Business Goals in Mind
What distinguishes the photographers I interviewed from the average, aint-this-fun! bloggers is that they are all very aware of the business value of their blogging efforts. In short, they know they are blogging for potential clients as well family, friends and fans. Yet every one of them insisted that this focused marketing did not require a major effort. They all said if you are not having fun, there’s something wrong with your blogging.

This is the secret of power blogging for photographers: Finding a way to enjoy yourself in a relaxed, unfettered way — a break from regular chores and obligations! — but with an eye on Continue reading “Practical Strategies for Power Blogging”

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May 14 2008

Power Blogging: A Professional Photographers Best Friend

Category: Business & Marketing, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 7:09 am

ACMF_080514_1How’s your blogging going these days? Are you having fun? Are you finding new ways to express your photographic creativity? And most important from a business standpoint, are you impressing potential clients and landing more jobs? If not, read on for a little help with Power Blogging 101.

“I blog, therefore I am,” Suzanne Salvo told me when I interviewed her for “Enter the Blogoshere,” an AfterCapture article that highlighted the blog-o-thinking of three photographers who jumped on the blog bandwagon with particularly adept insight into the marketing potential of blogs.

Continue reading “Power Blogging: A Professional Photographers Best Friend”

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