-
Website
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/ -
Original page
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/personal-branding-and-social-media/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Ari Herzog
120 comments · 23 points
-
Don Lafferty
59 comments · 3 points
-
Danny Brown
77 comments · 28 points
-
Dale Cruse
65 comments · 2 points
-
gerardmclean
43 comments · 7 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
While the Iron is Hot
1 day ago · 61 comments
-
I Was Wrong About Twitter Lists
2 days ago · 64 comments
-
The Visible Media Maker
1 day ago · 25 comments
-
Simplicity Trumps Most Other Emotions
3 days ago · 53 comments
-
How to Make Goals Happen- Part 1 – GoalBox
5 days ago · 65 comments
-
While the Iron is Hot
"Remember that your audience deserves your very best. !" This point you made above may be the secret ! Widgets are a tough decision ! I alway's wonder of they create traffic! Excellent Article !
It happened for me quite by accident. Seth Godin's "Purple Cow" launch was supplemented by a nice little ebooklet of case studies called "99 Purple Cows" - and he was gracious to include my story in it.
Since then, I've branded most things with the color purple - and the tag line: "Dr.Mani - he's DIFFERENT!"
Website: http://www.b--Different.com
Blog: http://EzineMarketingCenter.com
Twitter: http://www.Twitter.com/drmani
MySpace: http://www.MySpace.com/drmani
All success
Dr.Mani
Blog: http://EzineMarketingCenter.com/blog/
Dr.Mani
I'd love to hear thoughts on this!
Great to meet you at Blogtoberfest, by the way.
Part of my personality has always been to pick up rocks and look under them, or point out the 800 lb gorillas in the room. I don't do it to be a jerk; I'm just curious.
I'm very new to a lot of the social media apps, but it seems that not very many of my travel writer buddies are talking much about them beyond blogs. If I Google the topic, I get a bunch of links from travel companies and travel PR firms that are trying to figure out how to make money from it, but not many from straight-stick travel writers.
Since part of my brand is to provide practical travel info, I decided to take a swipe at it myself. Last night, I wrote a Perceptive Travel blog post 6 ways travelers can use social media.
It's laughably basic stuff from a tech expert perspective, but it's very new to many of my readers, so I don't mind looking dumb.
That's how I used social media to extend my brand, aka "Sheila who looks at the weird stuff." :)
Joanna
What is everyones opinion on making a change like this? Will it take some time to get all my Google juice (what little I have) back again?
I guess maybe I'm less worried about GJ and more worried about those that have links to archive posts. I use FeedBurner so I should be ok moving the RSS feed. Has anyone done this and how successful was it?
Thoughts?
*everyone: "Hi Christine"*
As always, you provide great advice! I'm going to get cracking on my signature and "about" page.
We also learned this the hard way with a conference I am working. The conference is in a series called "Northeast Regional Law Libraries Meeting" which when working we shortened to "NE2007". This year's conference theme is "Libraries Without Borders." We advertised "Libraries Without Borders" and all the local people working on the conference (a considerable number!) didn't know what it was, didn't connect the two. Similar confusion with one of our major sponsors. If I could go back I would have thought about the branding differently on this one.
Cheers!
Connie
"connieblogger"
"conniec"
"Connie Crosby"
So to that end, I went with several "sub pages" of content, going on the assumption that if anyone was interested in more information, they'd take the time to find that information. I didn't have to shove all of it in the sidebar. In fact, I've spent way too much time scrolling through blog rolls and contact lists, and previous posts, and most recent comments, and most recent visitors, and a list of all the blogs that link here, and a list of all the social media site, and a list of all ... you see where this is going.
So I stopped the insanity. I make sure that I used some sense and sensibility when I grouped things together, and hopefully made it easy for people who *want* more information to get more information.
At least... I hope I did that.