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Blogging

Cartoon by Hugh MacLeod

I’m going to make this short and sweet.

It is 4:49 a.m. and I just bounced out of bed to write a blog post.

???

It occurred to me that perhaps the reason I’ve gone from blogging almost daily to hardly at all over the last couple of months is that writing was my outlet…until I started running again.

I fell in love with distance running about ten years ago and since then have run six half-marathons and completed the training for two full marathons. (A half marathon is 13.1 miles; a full is 26.2.)

I say “completed the training for two full marathons” because I have yet to run the race itself; the first time I was severely injured during the “taper” phase two weeks before the race, and the second time I came down with pneumonia three days before the day of the race.

DON’T EVEN GET ME STARTED.

Anyway.

I haven’t run much the last couple of years and was inspired to start again after Thanksgiving. I’ve now got a pretty good foundation again and am starting to increase my mileage in preparation for a half-marathon at the end of April.

I love distance running because I can just lace up my shoes and go. I can let my mind wander while I put one foot in front of the other…sometimes for hours on end depending on how many miles I plan to get in that day. It’s always been my best thinking time, and really, my best outlet when I am frustrated, mad, sad, having a bad day, have information I need to process, a problem to solve, or an issue to address.

It occurred to me as I was tossing and turning in bed with insomnia and a boat load of stuff on my mind that maybe running has taken the place of writing for me lately?

And then I started thinking.

Everyone must have an outlet of some sort…a way to cope and sort things out when needed; you know, to deal with LIFE.

If running and writing are mine, what are other peoples’ outlets?

I’m seriously curious; what are yours?

How do you people deal with life??

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Cartoon by Hugh MacLeod

Cartoon by Hugh MacLeod

Each morning I wake up to a fresh new blog post from Chris Brogan.

You want to talk about discipline? Chris has discipline.

If you have a blog or have ever had a blog you probably know how difficult it is to find the time – let alone the ideas – to write a new blog post every single day.

A friend of mine said something to me last night that really made me think about discipline and how I seriously need to have more of it, so Chris’s blog post, Discipline and the Blogger’s Opportunity, couldn’t have arrived at a better time for me.

Chris writes about the fact that every blog post is an opportunity. “Every time you post, you build an opportunity. It might be for making business. It might be for sharing thought leadership. It might be the chance to build some new relationships. Mechanically, it might just be another attempt to gain better organic ranking from Google. But each post is an opportunity.”

He goes on to provide several important points to consider before writing a blog post:

Show up – First, just be there. By writing a blog post on a regular schedule, your audience knows to expect you. They come to accept the flow of your efforts. Farmers have this relationship with their systems. It shows stewardship.

Deliver value – Bring your best game as often as possible. We all have “barely functional” days, but more often than not, if we’re earning people’s respect, our efforts must be something of value to our reader. Writing about ourselves doesn’t cut it.

Improve – Your great post from a week ago doesn’t give you a hall pass. Learn from those posts that don’t hit. Experiment. Read other great writers in your vertical and outside of it. Deconstruct what they’re doing and try to improve your game.

Clarify your desire – If you’re seeking a specific result from a post, guide your audience to that result. If you’re seeking sales, make the call to action obvious. If you’re looking for comments, invite a dialogue at the end of your post. It’s yours to win.

Do your part – Blogging isn’t all about your blog. Have you commented lately on others’ blogs? Are you sharing using the various social sharing tools? Be a good neighbor and help other bloggers by sharing, commenting, and adding value to the ecosystem.

As I read these points I couldn’t help but think that they can be applied to many areas of our lives…not just blogging.

Go back and read those points again, and this time think about them outside of the context of blogging. Think about them in terms of your work life; your personal life.

Isn’t it interesting that the things that make us successful at doing one thing can make us successful in so many ways?

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Cartoon by Hugh MacLeod

Cartoon by Hugh MacLeod

Recently my He Said, She Said co-host, Todd Schnick, asked me if Thesis helps with SEO for blogs and other websites.

He’s been monitoring the Alexa rank of blogs and other sites he frequents and had noticed that the sites built using the Thesis theme had noticeably lower Alexa ranks than others.

Since I am an affiliate for Thesis I felt like a complete idiot for not knowing the answer; in fact, I had never even given it any thought.

DUH.

So, I did a little research and came across this blog post which explains that, in fact, “The SEO reason to buy Thesis is also clear – it rocks.”

The author explains the SEO benefits of the Thesis theme.

The arrival and growth of Thesis has presented novice bloggers, designers, and enthusiasts with the single most powerful and intuitive SEO tool to date. It’s an extension of building content that helps your content get “found” by searchers.

Thesis, properly used, allows everyone a chance to maximize their visibility, traffic, and online brand presence. This has been proven, time and again, by myriad users of the theme, experts and “newbies” alike.

At the time of this writing, self-hosted WordPress 2.7.x and Thesis 1.4.x are the current best-practice method to leverage Thesis fully. Self-hosted means having your own domain [www.yourdomain.com] along with PHP5 and mySQL.

Hosting on WordPress or other “free” sites can work at a rudimentary level, but not to full advantage. As that gets into off-page SEO, we’ll ask you to take our word on that.

There are, have been, and will continue to be decent “plug-in” modules that can assist basic WordPress themes in allowing for varying amounts of SEO control by the end user (that would be you).

So. Why should you buy Thesis, which presently costs either $87 for a single domain or $164 for the “every domain I personally own” developer membership option?

A number of reasons.

While we focus here on how to use Thesis and SEO to grow traffic, subscribers, and organic search rankings, Thesis is also – unlike plugins – a highly flexible design theme that offers users limitless capability to create “unrecognizable” versions of the default Thesis construct.

These customizations are unaffected by updating versions, as they are maintained in a folder specifically intended for this purpose.”

To learn more you can read the entire blog post – which includes a basic yet thorough Thesis SEO tutorial – here.

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Cartoon by Hugh

Cartoon by Hugh

I’ve been working with business coach, Alicia Arenas, for the last two months in order to help better define my business focus and my brand. I’ve been feeling for the past few months that I’ve been operating a mile wide and an inch deep, and I think it’s important to really focus on what you’re truly passionate about in order to achieve all-encompassing success.

During one of our early sessions she asked me to list everything I was doing at the time.

It was a really long list.

Which was basically the problem.

It included blogging, writing a column for Examiner, contributing to several other blogs/sites on a regular basis, speaking, training, consulting, writing [at least] two books, and more.

Alicia then asked me to name the one thing, out of all of those things, that I loved doing the most.

My answer couldn’t have surprised me more.

My blog.

I love to write on my blog.

On the days I can’t write I am flat-out frustrated.

We talked about why this is.

First and foremost, I love to write.

So, why my blog, and not my Examiner column, or books?

I think it’s because I feel that I have the most freedom of expression on my blog.

I can talk about anything I want.

I can say how I really feel about things.

I can curse.

I can give people names that describe how I truly feel about them…like Evil Boss Lady, for instance.

And, I think my blog helps me better connect with my friends, colleagues, and prospective clients.

It gives me a platform to state my perspective on issues and to respond to things others have written when I have more to say than is appropriate for their comments section.

And, do you want to know what my dream job really is? Hanging out with the love of my life in our PJs all day and earning enough money to support our rock star life by blogging.

So there you have it.

I’ve been on Twitter for more than three years now, and while I thought that allowed me to connect and express myself – and it does to a degree – I really had absolutely no idea as to what I was missing out on until I started this blog.

It’s allowed me to connect with people on a whole new level.

And I’ve learned a lot through the blogging process.

Probably the most critical thing I’ve learned is that it’s important to be brave.

It’s important to let others in. To let them get to know you.

What you think, and what you really feel.

It’s ok to admit your mistakes. Your imperfections.

In fact, I’ve learned that people respect that. They can connect with you when they see that you are a real person and that you, too, screw up sometimes.

I mean – if you think about it – that’s one of the most human elements of building relationships and deeper connections with others.

Aren’t you relieved when you talk to someone and they admit a mistake or something they wish they’d done/could do differently to you? It makes them seem human, and I don’t know about you, but I often find myself thinking, “Well, if _______ did that, and I know how much I like and respect this person, then I must be ok too.”

Today my good friend and He Said, She Said co-host Todd Schnick wrote about how “playing to an empty house” will sabotage your business and your attempt to build community. “The simple, profound act of caring for your community, serving your community, helping your community – you will grow an audience. See, what most folks do is try to force it – and they actually work against themselves.

If you become known as someone who serves first and sells second – you will be playing to a FULL HOUSE – and a crowd that wants to be there!

I believe that one of the very best gifts you can give your community is the opportunity to get to know the real you.

I’ve written a lot about blogging here, and one of the things I say a lot is that you should be brave.

Your readers – your community – will appreciate it, and they’ll respect you for it.

I’m not saying that it’s always easy.

IT’S NOT.

In fact, as I sit here getting ready to hit “publish” – I’m a little nauseous.

If I can do it, you can do it.

And once you start I think you’ll find that you’ve got support, and that you’re not alone.

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He Said, She Said – Round 6 | Multi-dimensional blogging

October 9, 2009

Last night we  filmed Round 6 while at the first ever Red Shoe Project Tweetup in Atlanta, Georgia. It was my turn to choose the question, and since we had been to the ATL Bloggers Meetup the night before, I wanted to talk about blogging.
We discussed what we think are the benefits of multidimensional blogging…the [...]

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For my HR blogger friends | The USA HR Blogger Project

October 3, 2009

After attending an amazing blogging conference in Oklahoma called Throw Your Voice, Jessica Miller-Merrell was inspired by Jennifer James of JenX67.com to find an authentic HR blogger in all 50 states.
If you are interested in being featured for this project, please email her directly at jessica@xceptionalhr.com with the subject line USA HR Blogger Project.
Please help [...]

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Using Hubspot’s Website Grader to learn how to optimize your website

August 29, 2009

Today I ran a report on Hubspot’s Website Grader for Radiant Veracity.
Finally, I now have some insight into my blog stats and what I need to do from an SEO (search engine optimization) perspective – and I recommend running this report for your blog so you can learn more too. They also have a blog [...]

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The Alexa ranking demystified

August 24, 2009

Until a few months ago I’d never heard of Alexa. Since starting my blog I’ve learned from other bloggers and Alexa rankings kept coming up in conversation. I checked out the Alexa website, found their site widget, and installed it. I recently discovered their toolbar and installed that too.
I’ve become more and more intrigued with Alexa [...]

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So you want to start a blog?

August 13, 2009

Today on Punk Rock HR Laurie Ruettimann asks, “What’s the most successful way to start blogging about HR?”
I started to comment then realized that I had much more to say than would be polite write in Laurie’s comments section so I’m responding here instead.
When setting up your blog host it yourself. This means that you’ll [...]

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Recommended reading: My blog got me a new job

August 12, 2009

In an hour I’m going to be a guest on the Recruiting Animal’s weekly radio show.
When I spoke to him on Monday regarding what we’d talk about for an hour I said that I’d like to talk about how blogs can help people get a job / grow their business / boost their career. Animal [...]

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Discover and track what’s being said about you online

August 10, 2009

I talk to people every day about the importance of managing their online image / reputation / brand. Whether you are looking for a job or would like to keep the one you have this is critically important for your career.
This morning I came across this fantastic blog post on JobMob called 200+ Resources and [...]

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How blogs can work for recruiters (and you!)

July 29, 2009

Thanks to Dan Schawbel’s generosity on Twitter I recently discovered an article on AJC.com, “Here’s how blogs can work for you” by Laura Raines.
Raines writes, “Blogs are spreading faster than kudzu in the business world. Why? Because, when done effectively, they are a great marketing, sales and public relations tool for corporations or entrepreneurs,” said [...]

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