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While the Iron is Hot
I'm just getting started and enjoy your posts, and your tweets! Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom (isn't this 22?)with the rest of us! :o)
Now if I could just figure out how to find the time to post more often.....
Warm regards,
Kristin
You rock.
I love Dad-O-Matic, and just came over here after following you on Twitter. You're pretty much right on. It's amazing what happens when you build a community. I've had offers and opportunities that I never knew or considered before.
I might also add that not only should you guest blog, but invite others to guest blog for you. It gets them interested in you, they usually link to you, and their readers become interested in you as well. If you do it right, and link back to their site from their guest post, it's a win-win!
Often, those of us not involved in social media fields tend to get distracted a lot. It always helps to remember what role we expect this medium to play in our respective fields.
Should someone who does not face customers, and involved in the backend of things, 'indulge' in the new media and community building activities?
I am playing the devil's advocate because I have a blog and am in the process of attempting to build a community but have tons of doubts on how much time I should be spending on these efforts. What do you think?
I also like sharing media that sends community my way! Meeting peeps at events, taking pics and sharing on Flickr and Facebook helps facilitate bonding AFTER the event is over. I also create podcasts of all my helpful blog articles on MyTechOpinion.com and put them on iTunes. Both strategies have yielded pretty fair results.
I think we all hang around each other's blogs for the same reasons we would hang around each other in person - we like each other for some reason. There's room for conversation. You ask us about us instead of dominating the conversation. You admit mistakes instead of being a one-way message.
So yeah, let's go get a beer after work or have coffee and chat. That's what blogs are to some people now, especially those of us who don't get out much. It's a space for friendly, helpful social intercourse, and that's pretty darned special.
I'm a business owner, wearing 15,000 hats (yes, that's the real number...lol). Love your info, just trying to learn how to fit it all into my schedule. Maybe that could be a topic for you to write about?
Great post and some really useful tips too. Thanks for sharing!
As I struggle with thinking whether I want to/how I go about building my blog up even further, having a roadmap like this is amazingly useful. So thank you for being awesome.
Nice job with the entire list.
Thanks so much for the info.
Donna
I think more people are finally realizing that it is indeed all about the sharing - now we just need our politicians to buckle up and join the ride. :)
I'm currently practicing tip #10.
One of my favorite ideas is predicated on the notion that your existing readers really enjoy your stuff. If that's the case, ask them to tell their friends (i.e., ask them to join in a virtual "subscription drive"). Ask for help. Provide the rationale that you work hard to provide them great stuff for free (your point #4 above). Tell them you're explicitly asking for their help in building the conversation around such stuff and request they suggest the blog to their friends ("heck, if you like it, your friends who like the same things you do will probably like it too!"). Use a similar rationale to your autism fundraising drive ("if you tell 5 people and they tell 5 people, that's a lot of people!").
I've learnt a lot from you in the last year and still keep doing it. Guess it follows your karma spreading policy.
I printed this list and will post it next to my desk. Thanks
Surprisingly I've not submitted my blog to dmoz, because of frustration with doing it in the past, but I followed your link and went ahead and sent in the submission in the resources directory of weblogs.
Hopefully it will be included. Could help to push my alexa ranking where I want it even faster than I'm already doing. :)
This was such a good example of what it was preaching (be all about the community) that for a moment I failed to think "I should subscribe to this feed".
Is there a danger in being too community focused that you miss out on potential subscribers in this way?
The way I see it, your community members are what makes you (or anyone) successful. Without them, you may as well be yelling into the wind! So when you make it about other people, and not you, you're giving them thanks for being a part of the conversation. People appreciate that, they respect that. And because you've taken the time to do that, they'll invite their friends and your community will only continue to get larger and larger.
Chris, you're one of the few who does this all to well! In any situation, you always find a way to make it less about you, and more about the other person. You do it with style and class and we appreciate you for that.
10. Comment the HELL out of other people’s blogs. Not fishing for your blog. Just adding your voice to theirs.
I'm always impressed when I see all the different posts you comment on.
This is a great article, I am taking your advice by poking around on blogs outside my passion circle to network.
Thanks for inspiring me to be better ;-)
-Bill
Thanks so much.
sharon
~ John Michael Cannon
Thanks for keeping us informed
Gary McElwain
#24 is incredibly important. So easy to get off the mark without a focused strategy. Not necessarily a tight niche, but an understanding of your community's (changing) needs. I think we all struggle with that.
Awesome tips. Thanks!
@Gary - Oh, I read about 700 blogs. I told YOU to read about 100. Didn't want to scare you. : )
@Rob - means negative and kind of complaining.
Seriously, thanks for the consistent thought leadership. It is much appreciated.
When the conversation gets bigger and that's no longer so feasible, keep commenting to groups, or dip in and respond to some comments (as you have just done) and find other ways to keep on connecting, through twitter, other social media, group writing projects, competitions etc
I would also encourage people to study in detail the *practice* of people like you, Liz Strauss, and Darren Rowse as there's so much to be learned from the implementation as much as posts like this.
Here's to your continued success
Thanks for being who you are and all that you share and do!
Timothy
http://www.twitter.com/timothycarter
How do you all do it?
I love Chris's positive approach. It think it is way important to let other people know you appreciate what they do and their talent. I am not a good sell on self-promotion myself.
The numbers are important, perhaps not in terms of your bank balance, but certainly for your own personal achievement and sense of accomplishment, and knowing you are reaching out to many people in a way that helps them.
I have found your posts invaluable in helping me move along the right track, and try reference you wherever possible - not to try curry favour, but because your posts contain genuinely practical and actionable points which show tangible results.
Last point which has been raised by several readers: its a huge challenge to keep up with everything - family, day job and then finding time to read blogs, post comments, write new posts etc. How do you prioritise and balance all this?
I voiced this challenge in a recent tweet: "Note to self: there is a world beyond Twitter. Feed the dog. Feed kids. Say hello to wife."
May you move onward and upward.
Kind regards
Kevin
So here is a question for you (because my own tip is: respond, respond, respond to comments; if not all, then some of them).
When linking, which is better - links opening a new tab or window, or links opening on your page?
I ask because I clicked on Brian Clark and then got lost for an hour. I only got back here much later.
Thanks for finding time to reply!
I am just getting started really and this is really inspiring. Merci! My key takeaway (no surprise) is to be there and to be helpful :)
Thanks again,
Mathieu
I just sent you an email at your network2 address. Is this email still valid? We met in May 2007 at the KillerApp Conference in Fort Wayne, Indiana. We exchanged a couple of emails. Anyway, I am looking for consultation services.
Thanks.
Corey
Seriously, building community can be extremely time consuming and its difficult to know where to draw the line - can you justify 1,2,3,4 hours a day, one day a week..this stuff doesn't pay the mortgage by itself
Craig
www.budgetpulse.com
Thanks a lot.
I have been reading about blogging, but have not read about how to list my blog with the search engines
To read 100 other blogs outside your own realm, try this:
Set up a search on twitter (search.twitter.com) and then take the RSS feed of that search and put it into your reader. You'll be able to pull any particular phrase out with any relevant link and explore in a nearly random manner...
Let's hear it for diversity!
Replying their comments and recommending other people's articles (as you said) are great ways to grow the relation with your readership.
Excellent post! Thanks for the help.
Of course that means I need to do a better job with this as well.
After numerous recommendations, I have become a fan of yours. This article really was a value add.
Thanx,
Joel Libava
I definitely advocate multimedia posts — I'm a video tutorial/screencast pioneer and much of my joy comes from watching other people express themselves beyond text alone, which can be misinterpreted too easily.
As bandwidth increases, this will only become more true.
Thanx for sharing, Chris!
I guess what you've said out there applies to those who are trying to make their "buck" out their with their blogs.
What I'd really be interested in listening to would be stuff that involves building "non blog" communities, say for example a niche forum or social networking site.
But yeah, I may just be mistaken because you seem to refer in general to "building your internal blog community".
Nice read anyways!
"Be full of humility"
I love it! Humility is one of the greatest characteristics we can have in life. Living it in our personal & professional lives is the right thing to do!
--
http://twitter.com/franswaa
One thing I felt that was missing was something around the Connector X theory about putting people together. I really think that's something that doesn't get enough attention but can reap huge rewards.
It's VERRRRRY easy to fall down that hole - luckily I got back on track.
I am late to the party but found this valuable post on blogburst.com. Thanks again for helping me learn! I will keep following you on twitter.
dean
Throwing a wide net means connecting with a lot of people who have shared interests. I regularly visit sites outside of my usual neighborhoods, enjoying the difference reference points that people draw from.
As a wife and mother I find it difficult to keep up with all the social media sites and so I wanted to know if there were an application that you could use to enter your updates and automatically add it to all of your accounts (facebook, myspace, twitter, etc.)
I also wanted to build my community by creating a radio show/podcast of articles from my blog at thecocktailcafe.com but don't know if that would make much sense.
What do you think?
Not to do this idly, but if you start someplace that interests you, going three links out certainly gets you out of the neighborhood.
I try as well to "follow disgruntle." I wrote about this as a kind of learning strategy, but it can work for building community as well. The idea is when you find yourself getting annoyed or frustrated very early with a post, go with that disgruntled feeling for a bit.
It may be a hint to question your preconceptions or most quickly deployed judgments.
Thanks,
Sean
I would love to know what snarky (# 21) means though ?
Thanks, Rob Barham, UK.