Theodore Henderson Author of the Amazon best selling book “The Wisdom Compass: Your 31 Day Journey to Wisdom Filled Living” shares sales and marketing tips for self published authors and small independent publishers.
Archive for Social Media
What is Social Media – Pt IV
By Theodore Henderson on February 19, 2009
What is a “Blog”? The name is a contraction of the term “weblog”. Rest easy, it’s not a disease or a space alien. It is however a website that is a form of online diary displayed in chronological order by most recent first.
Topics covered range from news, commentary on your life, events, or a particular subject. They combine text, images, video, links to blogs, and link to web pages all can be part of a blog. Blogs can be tremendously interactive meaning that visitors can leave comments. The blog author can, and should, determine who can leave comments, as the potential for spam is huge.
Most blogs are text based, meaning that they are writing in HTML although more and more blogs are focusing on other forms of communications such as images, photographs (photoblogs), videos, (vlogs), music and audio (podcasting).
A well written and well maintained blog is the crown jewel in your social media networking efforts. For instance this blog post that you are currently reading is a WordPress platform blog and each time I post here, Twitter and Facebook are automatically notified that a new post is available because we activated the appropriate WordPress plugins.
Traditional media at first ignored and dismissed blogs and now they are frantically trying to catch up as professional news blogs such as GretaWire on Fox and The Huffington Post explode on to the scene particularly as they did in 2008 election year by reacting swiftly to events in the news. Blogs can, and do deliver an incredible amount of content to a diverse user base. If you can think of it, there is probably an audience for it, and writing a blog is a very simple way of getting your thoughts, products, and services out to a global audience.
Go to Google and search for various types of blogs such as political, news, technical, and marketing. These aren’t the only types but are generally in the realm of what I personally read. Many of these are restrictive in content and advertising if they have any. However, just when we see a pattern there is always some one to break it. The marketing blogs go in the other direction by making space available for ads and content even to competitors in some cases. Another source for blog searching is Technorati, It is a search engine focusing on RSS and blogs. They are tracking over 70 million blogs on the Internet. Some of them are up to date and some are out of date and irrelevant, but you may pick up some great ideas for blog posts of your own.
If you are looking to advertise to a particular demographic look for a blog that caters to it and see if they will sell you a banner, skyscraper of other ad method. If they don’t advertise, but are popular contact them anyway.
Another effective way of bringing attention to your own blog is to comment on posts at blogs you visit in the demographic you are interested in. However be careful not to blatantly post your own product or service on somebody else’s site. They won’t appreciate it at all and you may likely be banned and your post rejected. Most blog authors are happy to accept a relevant post that mentions your name, email contact and possibly the name of your site. The benefit is that by posting on a well trafficked site you will be seen by more people and if the right keywords are in your posts you can get a little “link love” by getting some traffic pointed to your own site.
Remember you have to use the comment section that is associated with the post and put in your web link with an http:// otherwise the search engines will not pick up your link.
©THJ & Associates, LLC 2008
What is Social Media and Why Do We Need It? – Pt II
By Theodore Henderson on January 7, 2009
In a previous blog posted titled “What is Social Media and Why Do We Need It?” I discussed how social media can be applied to a method of delivery or types of information and what those delivery types consisted of. This post will cover additional delivery methods for getting our message out across the internet as we will be discussing blogs, TXT and Wikis.
BLOGS
Blogs are among first ways that allowed the average or casual user to create and distribute their message online in a broad based manner.
The beauty of a blog is that you are able to create a website or web presence quickly and efficiently without being technical. New content can be added quickly and stress free. RSS and XML feeds let you distribute content quickly. Many websites and blogs have links labeled “XML” or “RSS” or “Atom”. All of these are ways of saying that you can find out about updates to that site without having to visit the site in your web browser. Simply look for a RSS button that looks like the image above or a small orange button like this
and subscribe to their feed. In this manner you will be able to keep up with websites whose content changes on an unpredictable schedule.
My blog is a WordPress platform blog. WordPress is a state-of-the-art publishing platform that I highly recommend for its ease of use, and it is also free. You can publish your blog to your own domain or you can go to WordPress.com and set up a free blog. Be sure to educate yourself on the differences. WordPress.com has a LOT of restrictions. I suggest that you publish your own WordPress blog using either a free or purchased template.
TXT
Combined with blogging and social networking, text messaging and SMS are the most used technologies used by adults for communication.
WIKI
Communities that are established so that anyone who is part of the community can add a site and edit content. Sometime they are wide open and in other instances an administrator controls them. The collaborative encyclopedia Wikipedia is one of the best-known wikis.
PRESENCE APPLICATIONS
These are hybrid-messaging applications. Through a mobile device or web presence you can instant message. They are generally limited to 160-character limit. Most of the messaging presently revolves around people texting the world about the minutiae of their lives. However it is easy to the evolution towards more substantive and diversified communication across all areas of our personal and
business lives. Why? Because presence applications ultimately are real-time communications, messaging and routing supporting collaborative applications for user-to-user interaction, but also communication between applications and users. Now you understand why we should all be excited! It’s a communication
revolution outside of corporate infrastructure easily accessible by a mobile device if a computer isn’t available.
Some popular Social Networking applications are:
Pounce Now part of six apart.
Haiku Requires a bit more tech savvy as Haiku is an open-source operating system designed from the ground up for desktop computing. Haiku aims to provide users of all levels with a personal computing experience free of any unnecessary complexities. Considered in some circles as an alternative to Linux.
At present I’m a “Twitterer” and loving it! Please follow me here.
©THJ & Associates, LLC 2008





