Get paid To Promote at any Location

Adsense | Adwords | PPC | Advertise

Point of Authorithy

ProBlogger: 237: How Collaborations Can Accelerate Your Blog’s Growth

Posted by work smart 0 comments

ProBlogger: 237: How Collaborations Can Accelerate Your Blog’s Growth

Link to ProBlogger

237: How Collaborations Can Accelerate Your Blog’s Growth

Posted: 26 Feb 2018 12:00 AM PST

How to Use Collaborations to Grow Your Blog

Have you ever felt that too many things need doing to build a successful blog?

A student I spoke to this week who recently completed our Start A Blog course said they were a little overwhelmed by how much needed to be done.

They said it felt like juggling with too many balls in the air.

So today I want to share a principle that has helped me keep a lot of balls in the air, and scale my business beyond what I ever thought I could manage–collaborations.

When you're juggling alone you can only keep so many balls in the air. (The current record is 9 balls for 55 seconds.) But if you juggle with other people, you can keep more balls in the air for longer.

And this podcast is all about how you can make your blogging a more collaborative experience.

Links and Resources for How to Accelerate the Growth of Your Blog with Collaborations:

Further Listening

Examples of Collaborative Content

Courses

Join our Facebook group

Full Transcript Expand to view full transcript Compress to smaller transcript view
Hi there and welcome to episode 237 of the ProBlogger podcast. My name is Darren Rowse and I'm the blogger behind problogger.com, a blog, podcast, event, job board, series of ebooks, and courses designed to help you to start and have an amazing blog that's going to change the world in some way, that's going to change the lives of your audience but also build a profit, and in doing so, change your life a little way as well. You can learn more about ProBlogger over at problogger.com.

Of course, check out our two brand new courses. Firstly, our Ultimate Guide to Starting a Blog which was released earlier this year, and our soon to be released, 31 Days to Build a Better Blog. You can find the Start a Blog course at problogger.com/startablog and you can sign up to be notified when our 31 Days to Build a Better Blog course goes live at problogger.com/31days.

In today's episode, I want to talk about collaborations as a way to grow your blog, to accelerate the growth of your blog. I want to give you some practical ways that you can collaborate with other bloggers to grow you traffic, to create content, to build engagement on your blogs, and to monetize your blog. Collaborations have helped me incredibly to grow my blog, to scale it so much faster than I could've ever done alone, and I want to help you to do the same. You can find today's show notes at problogger.com/podcast/237.

Have you ever felt that there's just too many things that need to be done to build your blog to make it successful? This week, I was speaking to one of the students who've recently completed our a Start a Blog course and they said to me that they felt like they were completely overwhelmed by how much needed to be done. The words they used were they felt like it was a juggle and that they had too many balls in the air at once.

This is a feeling that I can relate too and I'm sure many of you can relate too as well because there's so many things that need to be done to build a successful blog.

You need to write content, edit that content, polish that content, and schedule that content. You need to promote that content, drive some traffic to your blog, engage on social media, set up an email list. Then when the traffic comes, you've got to moderate the comments and engage with the audience, there's email lists, there's blog design, there's servers, there's plugins, and WordPress that needs to be updated, then there's the monetization and finding the advertisers, all the affiliate products that you're going to promote or creating the products that you're going to sell, and then learning how to sell them, maintaining shopping carts, and the list goes on, and on. I hope I haven't just made you feel stressed.

This is something that we all feel from time to time. It's a common feeling. Most of us feel like we just can't get it all done. There's a number of solutions to this. One, we can get more effective with our time and certainly productivity is something that we teach about at ProBlogger. In fact, if you want to go back and listen to episodes 40 and 163, I'll give you some practical tips on how to be more effective with your time. But today I want to share a principle that helps me to keep a lot of balls in the air and to scale my business beyond what I've ever thought I'd be able to manage in the early days by myself.

Today I want to talk about collaborations. Here's the thing when you're juggling balls for example. There's only so many balls you can literally keep in the air at once. I actually just look up the world record for how many balls can you keep in the air at once and the world record is nine balls for a single person to juggle for 55 seconds and there's a video as well of it, it's pretty cool. You can only juggle so many balls at once, there's a ceiling to that number but when you juggle with other people you can keep more balls in the air at once and for longer. It's just logic really. Two people juggling nine balls each, that's 18 balls and if you're juggling together, potentially, you could even increase that number.

One of the things that I want to encourage you to do if you're feeling like you just can't get it all done, is to consider how you might want to make your blogging more of a collaborative experience. How can you involve others in the experience of blogging? There's a number of ways to do this and the most obvious one is to hire people to help you. New team members, or to outsource tasks. That's certainly one option but I know for many of you listening to this, it's not realistic at this point in your blogging journey. Maybe you don't have any money to invest into that, you might not have that sort of budget.

For the purposes of this podcast, I don't want to talk about hiring or outsourcing, that's probably a topic for another episode. In this podcast, I want to talk about collaborations with bloggers or other online entrepreneurs where you find a win-win opportunity to work with each other, where one person isn't paying another person to work for them but you're finding a win-win solution where you both can benefit from doing something together. It's a true collaboration.

In my experience of blogging, there's so many ways you can do this to grow your blog and the other person's blog. The key is to write from the outset, to look for a win-win, to look for something where you are going to benefit. Your blog will grow in some way, the other person’s blog will grow in some way, and their business will grow in some way as well. You both make the same thing out of it, you both make a traffic out of it all, you both make a content out of it all, or you both make monetization out of it all. In some situations, it may be that one person gets traffic and the other person gets content or vice versa.

There's a variety of different ways you can collaborate. In this episode what I want to do is run through four main areas that you might want to consider collaborating on and they're all tied around the pillars of ProBlogging that we talk about quite regularly on ProBlogger. If you've been listening for a while, you'll know that I advise all the time that you really should be putting most of your efforts into four things.

Firstly, creating content for your blog. Secondly, building engagement with your readers, building community with your readers. Thirdly, driving traffic to your blog, promoting your blog. Fourthly, monetizing your blog. If you want to build a profitable blog, they're the foundational of things you should be spending most of your time in. Content, engagement, traffic, and monetization.

There's other things that you should be doing as well but that's probably where 90% of your time should be going into. In my experience, you can collaborate in each of these four areas and some of you will have a real strength in two or three of them and you may have some weaknesses in another one. One way that you can supplement some of your weaknesses and boost one of those other areas is to find collaborations. What I want to do is to look at each one in turn and suggest one or two things that you could be doing in each of those areas to collaborate.

Firstly, let's look at content. There's a variety of way that bloggers could collaborate with one another when it comes to content. Firstly, and perhaps obviously, is we allow each other to create guest content for our blogs. This is very normal, it's very common and it's been going on for years. I'll write you a blog post, you write me a blog post or I'll just write you one and you post it. There's a variety of ways that you can kind of structure those kind of agreements, it might be we exchange posts for each other's blogs or maybe one person just writes for the other.

The idea here is that one person gets content and the other person get some traffic or some exposure to build their profile. This is very common and this is perhaps the easiest way that you might want to collaborate in this, but there's so many other ways that you could collaborate when it comes to content.

As I look at YouTube, I think we can learn a lot from them. YouTubers collaborate all the time. In fact, if you go to YouTube you can actually find a whole page that YouTube has created themselves to try and foster collaborations because they see it in their best interest if they get their users collaborating together. It's very common for one YouTuber to appear on another YouTubers channel and they create a piece of content together. Sometimes the piece of content will then go and appear on both of the channels. It's just normal, they do it all the time and they do it very, very well.

It struck me that this kind of collaboration where we create content together could happen on blogs too. It may be slightly more tricky with written words. We might think, "Well, I can't write an article with another blogger," but you actually can. In writing books, co-authorship happens all the time. The ProBlogger book is a co-authored book, it’s Chris Garrett and myself writing different parts of the book. We've seen mainstream media. Articles get written all the time that are collaborations and the by line is two people's names there. People work together as writers, why don't we do it more as bloggers?

I've got 20,000 posts that I've published on my blogs over the last 14 years. I didn't write them all but of those 20,000 posts, I would say 98% of them are one person writing the post. It's probably more like 99%. There's two main exceptions to that. Firstly, interviews would be the main exception to that and this is a relatively easy way to collaborate on a piece of content where one person interviews another and this is where I'd be starting out if you want to go beyond this post, I would be interviewing another blogger and then getting them to interview you and have those pieces of content go up on the blog. That's a really easy way to collaborate on a piece of content.

You could actually write the post together. I can think of two occasions where I've done this and I've published a post on ProBlogger back in 2004 and I'll link to the post in today's show notes so you can see them. In both of these posts, it was part of a series that I was doing on ProBlogger and the posts were written with a guy called Shayne Tilley who many of you will be familiar with. He speaks at our events almost every year and he's written a number of articles on ProBlogger.

In these two posts, I actually asked Shayne to tackle a topic but I also realized I had some things to say about that topic as well. If you go and have a look at the post, and I encourage you to do it, you'll see that he's written the post but from time to time there's this little section that says, "Darren says," and it's got my head in it. It's my little face and it's in italic so it looks slightly different. We've got these call out boxes, almost looks like a block quote type thing around it. Shayne writes his and his head is there and it says something like, "Shayne says," and then it says, "Darren says," and it's almost like a conversation. It's not an actual interview. he had written his article and then I chimed in with my comments along the way. This post really went over well. Our readers really enjoyed that back and forth on this topic. It's just one way that you might want to do a post with someone else, a collaboration in that written form.

There's so many other ways that you can do it. You could run a series of blog posts across two blogs. I have the first post on my blog, you have the second post on your blog, and then we interlink them. Sending traffic back and forth and collaborating that way, we could do a blog take over. I've done this in the past on ProBlogger where I've taken a vacation and another blogger I think, Bryan Clark from Copyblogger came on in the early days of ProBlogger and he did a whole week of content on ProBlogger. You could do that type of collaboration as well. Think creatively about it. There's so many different ways that you could collaborate with another blogger in your niche.

That's the first pillar, creating content. The second pillar was growing engagement or building community. When it comes to doing that, I reckon there would be a lot of different ways that we could collaborate as bloggers together. For example, why does every blogger have to have their own Facebook group or their own Facebook page? What if a few small bloggers got together and they were from the same niche and decided to have a Facebook group together that they co-ran?

You'd want to choose carefully the type of person that you wanted to work with, you wanted to have some trust with that person, I'll talk more about building that trust later but why not do that? You may not have a big enough audience to really keep a Facebook Group running but what if two or three other bloggers in your niche decided to do it with you? Together, you probably would have enough people and it's a way of exposing each of you to each other's audiences and to build some engagement that could go deeper and beyond what anyone of you could do individually.

Similarly, you could run a Twitter chat together. Some bloggers actually do this, they agree on a hashtag and they decide that each of them is going to promote this hashtag, and once a week they do a Twitter chat where they get all their readers together to have a chat. Live video will be another way of doing it. You could do some live videos and share them to all of your different Facebook pages, or all of your different Facebook groups, and introduce each other's audiences to one another. Engagement, building that sort of back and forth is something that you could do together. In fact it may actually be easier to do, particularly if you're just starting out, if you do it together.

Third pillar was driving traffic. The same thing is true when it comes to doing that. We all share our own content on social media and emails each week. Why not partner up with another blogger and agree to share some of theirs if they share some of yours? I've done this a number of times over the years with other bloggers.

For example, when I was just starting Digital Photography School, there was another photography blog that was on a slightly different topic to mine. It had a slightly different focus but we realized our audiences did overlap. We decided that five times a week, once a day, we would share a post that the other one had written that day on our social media accounts. It was very simple, we just had this little Skype conversation open all the time. Every time we publish a new post, we just left the link in the Skype conversation and then every day when we're scheduling our social media, we went to the Skype conversation and grab the other persons link and added it into our social media channels.

Once a month, we decided that we were going to promote each other's content, one piece of content in an email newsletter. We each got to choose one of our posts that we thought would work best for the other person to link to in their newsletter. As a result of just doing that, both of our blogs grew faster and we accelerated the growth of our blog. There'd be so many different ways to do that. That was just me working with one other blogger, I've seen bloggers do this in little groups and they set up a Facebook group and they do this sort of sharing type thing. There's  a lot of different ways that you could do this.

The last pillar that I want to talk about is monetization and for me this has been the biggest area of collaboration. I guess this started way, way back when I began to do affiliate promotions of other bloggers' products. I remember the first time I actually did, I saw this other blogger in the photography space, had created an ebook. I've never really seen another blogger do an ebook before and then I noticed that it had this thing called an affiliate program to promote the ebook. They said that I could promote it and anyone could promote that ebook and earn 50% commission.

I think it was like a $15 ebook and I was like, "Wow, $7.50 per sale," I wonder what I could do in terms of sales. I signed up for their program. I didn't contact the blogger at all. I just signed up for their program and I grabbed the affiliate link, and that night I sent out an email to my little photography list. By sending out that email, I made a few hundred dollars over night and I was like, "Cool! That's pretty cool," that was just one email and for me that was a pretty big deal at that time. I decided a few weeks later to contact that blogger directly because I noticed they had a number of different ebooks.

I approached him, I didn't really know what I was doing, I didn't know whether it was a dumb thing to approach people directly but I approach the blogger and I said, "Would you be interested in giving my readers a discount on one of your ebooks?" He didn't really know whether that was a dumb thing either, this was all new to both of us but we decided to give it a go. He'd seen the sales come through from my previous promotion and he said, "Yeah, I'll give you 30% off for your readers for a week." We did this week long promotion on another one of his ebooks and a few months later my email list was slowly growing, and growing, and growing and it was the first time I've done anything like this.

I sent out an email and it went crazy because there was a discount this time. Over the coming weeks, I think we made about $5000 in sales as this promotion ran and that promotion did a few things. Firstly, it cemented a relationship with this blogger and we continued to work together for a few years after that. We're semi-regularly promoting each other's ebooks. Once I created some ebooks he became an affiliate for me as well. It became a really mutual relationship where we promoted each other's stuff, where we made quite a bit of money together. The other thing that I learned by doing that little collaboration was that ebooks worked with my audience and so I decided to create my first ebook.

I began the painstaking process of writing my first photography ebook. For me, it took me three or four months to get that ebook written, it was a lot of work. I got there in the end though. I think I tell the story of the creation of that ebook in episode 67 and back in that episode you might remember that ebook actually did really well with our audience. We made about $72000 over the 10 days after that launch. It was a really good payoff for all that work. But I got to the end of that launch and I knew I needed to do more products of my own but I just didn't have the time. This bring me back to collaboration again.

Creating ebooks was another ball that I had to put in the air but I was already at capacity, I was already juggling my nine balls, I didn't know how to add a tenth into that scenario. I decided the only way I could do it to create a second ebook was to find a collaborator. I reached out to one of the people who'd been writing some articles on my blog and we started talking about maybe instead of writing some articles for me, they could write an ebook for us and we decided to create this ebook together. He's had a collaboration work, he wrote it, he did all the work, and I'm writing it which was a lot of work but I worked on the design, the marketing, I had the traffic, I had the email list, and he didn't have any audience. I worked on promoting it and marketing it. Getting a shopping cart up, doing the customer service, and drove a lot of traffic to it, and we decided that we were going to split the profits on that.

That ebook did a lot better than the first one and it began a snowball effect in many ways. That collaborator went on to write three more ebooks. We ended up with four ebooks with him and then he also created a series of courses with us as well. It became an ongoing relationship that we had and as a result we made a fair bit of money for him and he made a fair bit of money for us as well.

Today we've published I think it's around 30 ebooks. All of them, except for the very first one, are collaborations. I've not written a single ebook on Digital Photography School since the very first one. In fact that first one no longer is available for sale, it's been superseded. We've created six courses, all of them are collaborations. We've created some softwares, some Lightroom presets, all of them are collaborations.

As I look at my income streams, 90% of them are collaborations. The only real exception in all of my income streams that's not a collaboration is the job board on ProBlogger and perhaps the event that we run for ProBlogger as well although even that you could probably argue as a collaboration of sorts because we work with a variety of speakers who speak at out events as well.

Ninety-percent of my income streams, even the ad networks, that's a collaboration. I'm partnering with AdSense, we sell ads directly to sponsors. I guess you could say that's a collaboration because the sponsor is working with us but we actually outsource the process of selling those ads as well to a third party who takes a cut of those ads as well so that's a collaboration too. Everything I do is collaborations when it comes to income and as I've been preparing this podcast, I guess really come home to me just how important collaborations have been for me.

How do you develop these collaborations I guess is the big question. The thing I want to say is that, yes, today 90% of my income comes from collaborations but it started really small. It started because that guy who wrote that first ebook with us, he started as a writer on our site and that was the small collaboration. He started writing some guest posts for us and we sent him a little bit of traffic, and helped build his profile, and he created some content for us, and that's where it began.

The first thing I would really encourage you to do is to think about how you can start small. You may not want to leap into writing a book together as your starting point. Start with them writing a piece of content for you or you writing a piece of content for them, or start with, "Let's promote each other's content once a week," and let that relationship grow, let that trust grow, see if you work well together. Do small things and let the great relationship grow naturally over time.

When I first had that guy write on my blog for the very first time, I didn't know it was going to turn into an ebook deal, then courses, and an ongoing thing. I didn't realize the nature of that relationship, I just started with something small. When you're looking for collaborators, look for people who have complementary skills sets to you. You don't want to just duplicate it, you don't want to just choose someone who's exactly like you because then you'll end up just doing the same things. As you look at your own skill set, maybe there's a deficiency, maybe you're not as good on design, or maybe you're not as good at promotion and marketing. Find other people who can complement those things and fill in those gaps that you have.

Look for collaborators who share your audience or at least complement your audience. You don't have to have a blog on exactly the same topic but there needs to be enough overlap, particularly if you're going to drive traffic in the collaboration, there's overlap there. You don't want to be a fashion blogger, and if they're a travel blogger, and you've got completely different audiences. You might work well together if they're a fashion blogger, and you're a travel blogger, and you share the same demographic of audience but if you're talking to retirees who are 70 and they're talking to millennials, it's probably not going to work at least in terms of sharing traffic and building engagement in that way.

Look for collaborators who share your values. I can't stress this enough. The few times that I've run into issues over the years with collaborations, it usually came down to us having different expectations of the relationship, different motivations, and ultimately some different values as well. You want to choose good people, people of character, people who share your values, your goals, and expectations as well. As part of this, you want to make sure you set the boundaries of the relationship early. Get the expectations right. If it's going beyond, "Hey, I'm going to write a piece of content for you, and you write a piece of content for me," if you're getting into, "We're going to create a product together," you want to get that in writing and know right up front how that is going to operate.

There's a variety of models there in terms of sharing revenue. You may do a collaboration where one person takes a higher percentage of profit or revenue based upon them bringing more to that relationship. It doesn't always have to be 50-50 but you want to be really clear up front about how the benefits, the wins from that collaborations are going to be split up.

Lastly, communicate. It's just so important to keep the avenues of communication open in these collaborations at all times. I'll just stress again, start small, you don't have to leap into a massive collaboration with someone that you barely know. You want to build trust. Let that relationship grow naturally and who knows where it might end up.

I hope that's helpful. I would love to hear your stories of collaboration. I know many of you have collaborated in ways that I haven't mentioned in this particular podcast and so I'd love to hear how you collaborate. Maybe we could do a follow up podcast at some stage with some of the things that you advice. You can let us know how you collaborate, any ideas that you've got on this topic in two ways. Firstly, on our show notes where there's an opportunity to comment at problogger.com/podcast/237 or in our Facebook group. You can let us know there any tips that you've got. If you are sharing a tip, just make sure you use the appropriate hashtag there. We like everyone to hashtag every post that they've got. If you've got some advice, hashtag it with that and if you've got a question to ask as well, make sure you do that. There's information in our pinned post about how to hashtag your posts.

Thank you so much for listening today. I'm actually going to be on the road next week, there may not be a podcast coming out on next Monday because I will be in San Diego at Social Media Marketing World where I'll be doing a talk. Part of my talk is actually about this very topic. If you're in San Diego, I'd love to catch up with you at Social Media Marketing World. Otherwise, I'll be back on the podcast in a couple of weeks' time with episode 238. Thanks for listening, chat with you next time.

If you are looking for something else to listen to, I did mention a few episodes during this particular episode. Episode 40 was 7 Productivity tips for Bloggers, episode 163 was another 3 Different Tips for Increasing your Productivity, and episode 67 was How To Create A Product For Your Blog where I tell the story of my first product and give you some suggestions on creating products for your own.

Dig around in the archives, there's 236 other episodes to find there. You might want to go back through iTunes. They're all sitting there, at least they will be for the next little while. I think 300 is the limit. Some of those early episodes will begin to disappear once we get up to the 300 episode mark. Thanks for listening.

If you've got a moment as well in iTunes or whatever podcast app you are listening to, I would love it if you'd leave us a review and rating. I do read them all, I get a notification every week every time a new one comes in. Let us know what your name is in that as well and if you want to pop in your blog link, it doesn't come up as a hyperlink but I do check out the links of all blogs that are mentioned there as well. Thanks for listening, chat with you next time.

You've been listening to ProBlogger. If you'd like to comment on any of today's topics or subscribe to the series, find us at problogger.com/podcast. Tweet us at @problogger. Find us at facebook.com/problogger or search ProBlogger on iTunes.

This episode of the ProBlogger podcast was edited by the team at PodcastMotor, who offer a great range of services including helping you to set up and launch your podcast as well as ongoing editing and production of the podcast that you produce. You can check them out at podcastmotor.com

How did you go with today's episode?

Enjoy this podcast? Sign up to our ProBloggerPLUS newsletter to get notified of all new tutorials and podcasts.

The post 237: How Collaborations Can Accelerate Your Blog’s Growth appeared first on ProBlogger.

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

ProBlogger: Behind the Scenes of ProBlogger’s First Course Ever

Posted by work smart 0 comments

ProBlogger: Behind the Scenes of ProBlogger’s First Course Ever

Link to ProBlogger

Behind the Scenes of ProBlogger’s First Course Ever

Posted: 22 Feb 2018 04:00 AM PST

Behind the scenes of ProBlogger first course launch

Last month we launched our very first ProBlogger course. After a whirlwind few weeks (months, actually ), I thought I'd take the opportunity to share a bit of what happened behind the scenes while creating the Ultimate Guide to Start a Blog course.

Why have we only started offering courses this year?

To say it's been a long time coming is a bit of an understatement. We're constantly asked why we don't offer courses, as it seems like the most obvious thing we should be doing. Our focus has always been on offering great value that’s easily accessible, whether it’s our free blog posts, podcasts or world class (yet very reasonably priced) events.

All of which takes up a huge chunk of time and dedication from our small team.

We've been thinking about courses for a while now, and our goal is to create a blogging course unlike any other. Something that goes beyond the that goes beyond the prescriptive "this is how I did it" approach that doesn’t necessarily work for everyone.

And so we created the Ultimate Guide to Start a Blog course, and made it available for free.

But this is just the beginning. We have many more courses in the pipeline, and together they’ll help you piece together the best approach to blogging for you.

What is the first course about?

Our first course starts at the beginning – how to start a blog. Actually, it starts even earlier in the process, as one of the first things the course asks is whether you should even start a blog.

That's one of the reasons our first course is totally free. We don't want you buying a course on how to blog if you find out blogging just isn't for you. We also don't advocate investing too much in getting your blog set up.

But we strongly suggest having a solid base (your own domain and a self-hosted site) so it's easier to progress if you decide to stick with it.

So, the first course provides a lot of guidance about:

  • why you should or shouldn't blog
  • what to blog about and call your blog
  • the basic steps to getting your first blog up and running and posting your first post.

All up there are seven steps. And while it's basic it’s also quite comprehensive – at least for a free course.

This was our beta launch, which we ran in the lead up to our self-proclaimed International Start a Blog Day on February 7th – a day to celebrate starting a new blog in a new year.

How did we create the course?

We get a lot of people asking us how we created the course site. So here's the breakdown in case you're looking for a possible way to launch your own.

Content

The content for the course is a mix of repurposed content from our blog, podcast and events, along with new content created specifically for the course. So we spent a lot of time editing existing audio, creating accompanying slides and converting them to videos, as well as creating new worksheets and other downloadable resources.

At first we were a bit worried about repurposing existing content. But when we realised how much work it is to a) find it in the first place, and b) organise it into a comprehensive easy-to-follow course, we were glad to have these resources to draw on and add the extra value of convenience and structure for our readers.

Infrastructure

We have a separate WordPress installation for our courses site, which sits on a different server to our main blog and podcast site installations. Here’s what our 'stack' looks like.

LMS (Learning Management Software)

Learndash – we like how this solution is both comprehensive and easy to use.

Theme

Social Learner – incorporating Buddypress elements for community features (we don’t use all of them), this theme  provides a good looking layout for the modules and lessons. We also used Thrive Architect (which works nicely with Social Learner) to build some of the extra content elements into our pages.

Membership Plugin

WPFusion – this is an elegant plugin that lets us easily control access to content based on tags specified in Drip for our course members.

Email Communication

We use Campaigns in Drip to automatically onboard course members after they've either filled out one of our Thrive Leads opt-ins or registered directly through the site.

Payments

Whilst the first course has been free, we’ll use our existing e-Commerce solution Easy Digital Downloads to process payments and pass information to Drip and the courses site via WPFusion.

Forum/Group

While our setup has the option for a forum, groups and comments (we turned comments on for some of the modules), we elected to run a Private Facebook Group for the first intake of students. Partly to test one against the other, but mainly so we could get students' feedback on the course as they progressed through. It also served as a customer service channel.

We won't be maintaining an ongoing group for the course throughout the year (course members can join our main Facebook group at problogger.com/group). But we will run one in conjunction with International Start a Blog Day each year.

Promotion

Building awareness, and the call to action to sign up for our Ultimate Guide to Starting a Blog course, was done primarily through the ProBlogger podcast, along with a sales page and a couple of articles on the blog.

Over the Christmas and New Year period, we changed how we did the ProBlogger podcast to generate interest in starting a blog and the course we were launching. Instead of a weekly podcast, we released a series of 12 shorter podcasts (one each weekday). And is each episode we shared a different blogger’s story about how they started their blog and how far they’ve come. These stories were told by ProBlogger podcast listeners who submitted their stories as audio files. This series of podcasts has one of the highest levels of engagement of any I've released. In each podcast there are calls to action to sign up for the course via the sales page on the blog.

The sales page for the Ultimate Guide to Starting a Blog course had an easy-to-communicate URL (problogger.com/startablog/), and a snappy design created using Thrive Architect. We linked to it in our "Start a Blog" section of the blog, as well as in a couple of articles we wrote about a starting a blog in the New Year.

Knowing that most of our audience had already started a blog, we asked people to share the information about our new course. We asked our existing readers to share it with those they knew who may be interested in starting a blog. We also asked the people who signed up for the course to share it with their friends.

Launch

Trying to launch anything early in the year can be tricky, especially when everyone in the southern hemisphere is typically on summer holidays. Like many course creators, we were still creating content and making the site look and work the way we wanted right up to the deadline.

We had team members holidaying in different time zones with bad wi-fi issues and sick kids. Some last minute re-recording of tutorials had Laney chasing away noisy dogs and throwing sticks into trees to scare away squawking birds. (We have some pretty obnoxious birds in Australia.)

It wasn’t exactly smooth sailing. But we kind of made our launch date (I’m sure we made it in a timezone somewhere in the world). And the actual launch happened without too many hiccups other than some people having activation issues because they clicked the link more than once.

The main takeaway? Don't expect everything to go smoothly, keep your cool, and prepare to work hard when it counts.

Outcome

We were blown away by the response. We knew there would be some, but given our readers have mostly started blogs already, it was hard to know just how many students we might get.

Sometimes you just have to trust your gut and go for it.

By the time it went live, almost 5,000 people had signed up for the course. Of these, roughly half went on to enrol in the course once it was launched, and half of those started the course (a little more than 1,000 students).

In the time between launching the course (January 10) and International Start a Blog Day (February 7), more than 1,000 new subscribers had signed up for the course. By the time February 7 came around, more than 2,000 students had started the Ultimate Guide to Starting a Blog course. More than 100 new blogs were launched in time for International Start a Blog Day, with many more launched since. You can check them out here.

And there were other positive outcomes too.

We ended up with more than 1,000 members in the beta Facebook Group, which gave us very useful environment for getting direct feedback from students as they were trying out the course. We learned a lot about:

  • the people who were signing up for the course
  • what their issues and pain points were
  • what they did and didn't like about the course
  • how we could help them going forward by improving the course (and in other ways).

International Start a Blog Day was also a very rewarding experience for me and the ProBlogger team. We got to really see and celebrate the course outcomes for the many students who launched new blogs as a result. We loved compiling the honor roll of new blogs – exploring their sites, reading people's stories, and seeing how they put their learning into practice.

And we now have a very comprehensive opt-in that helps us identify people we can help on their blogging journey. Best of all, they’ve shown they have the drive to take action, which makes it even easier for us to help them succeed.

What's next?

In March we'll be launching our first paid course – 31 Days to Build a Better Blog – the successor to the ever popular book of the same name. The course version includes:

  • more detailed course materials with video tutorial presentations
  • printable worksheets, resources, and further reading
  • recommendations and tools to help set the right foundations for accelerated growth.

For more information, and to sign up as one the first students to sign up for the 31 Days to Build a Better Blog course, visit courses.problogger.com/courses/31-days-to-build-a-better-blog/.

We're also reviewing the feedback we've received from the beta Start a Blog course group to help tweak and improve that course for future students.

Have you launched a course recently? How did it go for you?

The post Behind the Scenes of ProBlogger’s First Course Ever appeared first on ProBlogger.

      

ProBlogger: 236: 5 Areas to Focus on to Grow Your Blogging Income

Posted by work smart 0 comments

ProBlogger: 236: 5 Areas to Focus on to Grow Your Blogging Income

Link to ProBlogger

236: 5 Areas to Focus on to Grow Your Blogging Income

Posted: 19 Feb 2018 12:00 AM PST

Growing Your Blog’s Income

In today’s episode, I want to talk about growing your blogging income, particularly when you've already started building some traffic and income streams on your blog.

This one will be most relevant if you’re at an intermediate to more advanced level. If you’re just starting out you’ll learn things that may not be relevant for you today, but will be good to know going forward.

Series on Growing Traffic to Your Blog:

Podcast on Autoresponders:

Check out our two courses – ProBlogger's ultimate guide to start a blog and the soon to be released 31 Days to Build a better blog:

Join our Facebook Group

Full Transcript Expand to view full transcript Compress to smaller transcript view

Hi there and welcome to episode 236 of the ProBlogger podcast. My name is Darren Rowse and I'm the blogger behind problogger.com, a blog, podcast, events, job board, series of ebooks, and courses, all designed to help you as a blogger to grow your blog and to build profit around your blog which is exactly what we're talking today in today's episode. You can learn more about ProBlogger at problogger.com. Also, check out our two new courses, How to Start a Blog course for those of you who are wanting to start a blog. You can get it at problogger.com/startablog or 31 Days to Build a Better Blog which will be launching in March which is more relevant for those of you who've already got a blog whether it's a relatively new one or you're at that intermediate stage. You can find that at problogger.com/31days.

In today's episode, I wanna talk to you about growing your blog's income, particularly those of you who've already got a bit of a start with building some traffic and income streams to your blog. This episode will be much relevant for those of you are perhaps at more of an intermediate level, maybe more of an advanced level. You've got a start but you're not satisfied with the level of your income. Those of you who are just starting out, you're probably gonna hear some things that may not be relevant to you today but you might also find them useful to have in the back of your mind as you go forward.

Today's show notes and full transcript of the show are at problogger.com/podcast/236.

Today's show is inspired by a conversation I had this week with a blogger who had been blogging for a couple of years now. She built some traffic up to her blog. She'd already started to experiment with selling sponsored content on her blog. She was in sort of a style, fashion, beauty type niche and had been selling sponsored posts on the site but was not satisfied with the level that she was at. She's been blogging for two or three years and when she started out had hoped she'd be full time by this point. Whilst she had some success so far with building the income on her blog, she came to me asking, "How do I double what I'm doing?" She really needed to double what she was doing to get to a full time level.

On one hand, it was great, getting to a half time level with your blog is something that many bloggers dream of but she also had this thirst for more because she wanted to be able to give up other par- time work, children were going to school now and she had a little bit more time on her hands and so she wanted to really sink herself into her blogging, and to justify being able to do that full time rather than having to have a bitsy kind of life doing lots of different things. She came to me asking, "How do I double my income?" Now, it's a tricky question and to answer it, I actually took her back to my own kind of tipping point of my own blog.

Back in, I think it must have been 2004, I've been blogging for a couple of years by this point, and for the first year I didn't even know you could make money from your blog. I hadn't made any money and then the second year, I started to dabble with some Google AdSense ads on my blog, some Amazon affiliate income. Many of you have heard me tell the story before, I did not start spectacularly, I had a few dollars a day really in those first months or so. But it did gradually grow and I got to a similar point to the blogger that I had this conversation with this week where I was starting to see it as a part-time job. I began to have this dream that it could be a full time job.

To cut the long story short, I realized I needed to really escalate the growth of my income. Because it was a very slow, steady growth, and it eventually was going to get to be a full time thing if it kept growing the way that it was, but it was gonna take me 10 years to get to that point. Vanessa and myself decided that really, if I wanted to be a full time blogger, I needed to escalate the growth of the income. We set ourselves a six month time limit to do it which perhaps is not the most realistic deadline saying, "I'm gonna be full time in six months," isn't something I would recommend every blogger do. But we kind of sensed that I really needed to have this deadline because I was treating it as a one-day thing. We set ourselves this deadline.

The problem was to get to that deadline, I needed to not double my income, I needed to quadruple my income. I was a quarter time kind of blogger, if you like, at the time. I wanted to get to a full time level.

Having that deadline really did help me to spur myself on. One of the things I actually said to tis blogger this week was, "Maybe you need some sort of a deadline." In my case, we actually said that if I didn't get to full time level in six months that I would go and get a real job, and that would kind of put a real halt on my blogging. Potentially, could have even had to give it up, that six month mark. I wouldn't suggest you do that but at least having some sort of date in mind, some sort of a deadline in mind, can actually be helpful. It certainly helped me. It motivated me incredibly.

Some of you heard me tell the story before, but the day I set that deadline was the day I started doing things I always knew I should do, but I had no real reason to do. Like ringing up an advertiser for the first time and saying, "Hey, will you advertise on my blog?" Thinking seriously about growing traffic and all the things I knew I could be doing and I should be doing, I actually had a reason to start doing them. That deadline really did help in that regard. Over the next six months, I worked really hard on the things that I knew should be doing. I got to the point after a few months, I think it was three or four months, where I did reached that full time level, things just took off as a result of me doing things I knew I should do.

The first thing I encouraged this blogger to think about was, "What are the things you already know you should be doing that you've been putting off?" Most bloggers I talk to have this someday list, one day I'm going to do this, or one day I'm going to do that. I really wanna encourage you to look at your someday list and ask yourself, "What have I been putting off doing?" It's such a powerful exercise to do, and to write out your someday list, and then to identify the things on that list, the things you already know you should be doing, identify those and start with those because you already probably know what you need to do to get to a full time level.

I'm gonna suggest to you, five areas that will help you to grow your blogging income. I wanna encourage to just pause this podcast for a moment and to ask yourself this question, "What do I think I need to do?" Because I suspect, that as I go through this list, if you have paused and you've asked that question, you're probably gonna already have the answer. Once you do it, go listen to the rest of the podcast. I also wanna encourage to listen to you because I suspect you already intuitively know what it is that you need to do.

Some of you will remember I did a series of podcasts. I think it started back in episode 66 and then went for 10 more episodes over the next few weeks. It was called 10 Things That You Can Do Today That Will Payoff In Your Blog Forever. The whole idea of that series was to identify the things on our someday list and to do those things today, to bring those things forward. I suggested ten things in that series that will help to escalate the growth of your blog. Things that you can do today that are gonna payoff forever. I wanted to say right up front, for me, this is the key. This is the key to escalating the growth of your income in your blog, to take off of your someday list and start doing them today.

I think it was episode 66 right up to I guess episode 77. You might wanna check out that. But as I think about the growth of my own blogging income back at that point, in 2004, but also eversince. Since 2004, I've been full time pretty much the whole time. My blogging income did dip for one short period after that where Google decided to deindex me from their search result but apart from six-week glitch where I felt out of Google's result, I've been a full time blogger ever since 2004. My blogging income has gone up and down over that time. But there's been these spikes or there's been these periods where the blogging income has escalated really quickly. I think it was back in 2004 things really took off and I got to the full time. But 2008, it plateaued, it was steady, and then it took off again.

What I've put together today for this podcast episode are five things that I can see over the last 15 or so years that have led to spiking my income and growth in my income. As I think about it, there's five main things that have led to that type of growth. I wanna share them with you today. These are not tactical things, these are more general things, and then I'm gonna sort of dig into some tactical things as well.

The first thing that almost always has led to growth in the income is spikes in traffic. I can see very clearly as I look at my earnings over the last 14, 15 years that there's a correlation between an increase in traffic and an increase in income. It's not always exactly correlated. Different types of traffic can lead to different increases in income. A spike in traffic from Google for me pays off really well when it comes to Google AdSense earnings. But it doesn't necessarily lead to a massive increase in affiliate earnings, but other types of traffic do convert with affiliates. It's not an exact science but in the general principle I will say if you can increase your traffic, you're going to increase your income, at least potentially.

This is a no-brainer in some ways. I know most of you kind of understand this. But one way that I grew my income back in 2004 when I went from part-time blogger to a full time blogger was to put a lot of effort into growing my traffic. I learned SEO in that period. I started to write content based upon the words that I felt people would be searching google for. I put a lot of effort into creating guest content for other blogs and participating in forums. Back then, there was no real social media, but today I will put more time into social media. These types of activities can drive more traffic to your site which can lead to an increase in your earnings.

Another one that you might wanna try is advertising your blog, investing some money into driving some traffic. Maybe you wanna spend some more time on a new social network, maybe it's time for you to really invest your learning into Pinterest. There's a variety of different ways that you can grow traffic to your blog.

I don't wanna get into the nitty-gritty of growing traffic to your blog in this particular episode because I've covered it so many times in the past. I would encourage you, if traffic is the thing you know you need to grow and particularly if you're a new blogger, this is probably the one that's going to lead to the biggest growth for you in terms of income. You really need some traffic.

Go back and listen to episode 33, 34, 35, 36, and 37. There's five episodes there that I did as a series on growing traffic for your blog. I talk about the different types of content that can grow traffic. I talk about creating guest content in different places. I think I talk about using challenges to grow traffic. There's five episodes there that will help you to think about how to grow traffic to your blog. Again, I don't wanna promise if you double your traffic, you're gonna double your income because it does depend upon where the traffic is coming from, and the type of traffic you could get.

I remember there were times, way back in the day, where I got a lot of traffic in from a site like Digg which is similar to Reddit today. That really did not grow my income at all because it was the wrong type of traffic. It was teenage boys who were there to make fun of my content, some even went viral because it was funny but it didn't really lead to an on-going growth to my income.

Part of the process is to try and work out what type of traffic and what type of reader you're going to get as well. But in general, if you're gonna grow your traffic, you're gonna grow your income.

Again, that's a bit of a no-brainer in some ways but it just has to be said. If you can grow your traffic, you're gonna hopefully grow your income as well. So that's number one, traffic.

Number two, and this has happened time and time again for me, to grow your income, one of the ways that you can do that is to add a new income stream. One of the first times I learnt this was when I had been playing around with AdSense for a while. I think I was probably earning $30 or $40 a day from AdSense which I was pretty happy with. AdSense, for those of you who don't know, is Google's ad network. I was kind of managing along okay and then I began to realize other bloggers were using other ad networks as well as AdSense.

Back in the day, there were some rules around what kind of ads you can have on your blog alongside the AdSense. You couldn't have exactly the same types of ads. But there were these other ad networks beginning to emerge. One of them that caught my eye was Chitika which is still around today. You might wanna check that out. I'll link to it in today's show notes. It doesn't work on every blog but back in the day, it was a different type of ad. They were image-based ads but they weren't sort of like the banner ads that we see today. They actually featured little products. It didn't break AdSense's Terms of Service to run these Chitika ads alongside the AdSense ads, and so I decided I'm gonna experiment with Chitika. I didn't replace AdSense, I actually added these new ad units onto my page.

I remember doing it thinking maybe I'll land a few extra dollars a day. I went to to bed the night after I did it, the reports took a little while to come in so I didn't really know what impact it was going to have. I was a bit worried that maybe it would decrease my AdSense revenue. I woke up the next day and checked my reports and I couldn't believe it because my AdSense had not gone down at all but my Chitika income was the same as my AdSense income. What I realized is that I doubled my income overnight. Now it took me a few days to work out this was actually true, because I thought I'll give it a few days to work it out, but I doubled my income simply by adding a new couple of ad units onto my site. Adding this extra income stream obviously led to an increase in my overall income. This has happened time and time again for me.

I wanna say right upfront you wanna be a bit careful about adding too much onto your site in terms of ads particularly because it can have a downward effect on your Google search rankings. Google doesn't like it when you put too many ads on your site particularly if they're really up or above the fold, and they can't see any content vault. You wanna be a bit careful there, you don't want to plaster yourself with ads.

But there's such a variety of ways that you can monetize your site. I saw this when I added Chitika. I saw this when I began to added a job board onto ProBlogger. I saw this when I started to create ebooks for my sites, when I started to create other products like courses. I started to promote affiliate products, other people's courses and ebooks. There was a period on ProBlogger when I offered coaching services. There was a period where I did some freelance writing for other sites, that was another income stream.

There's all these different ways that you can explore adding a new income stream onto your site. This is probably one of the things I would encourage those of you who have one or two income streams on their site to begin to think about. Have a look at what other bloggers in your niche are doing. What are they doing to make money from their blogs? You might discover by looking around that they're all using this one type of ad network, or you might discover that they're all promoting this type of affiliate product, or you might discover that there's an opportunity for you to set-up a membership area on your site where you charge a little bit of money per month for some premium content to your community area. Or maybe you could offer some coaching, or maybe you could set-up a mastermind group, or maybe you could set-up a Patreon account. This is where people donate money and you maybe give them some extra bonuses, maybe you could run a little event, maybe a meet-up in your area, or an online event. These are all different income streams that bloggers use at different times.

Again, in today's show notes, I'll link to a money map that I created with 30 or 40 different ways that you can make money from blogging. For me, this was one of the ways that I went from part-time to full time, adding these new income streams into my blog. It wasn't just a matter of doing this or increase my traffic, I actually focused on both of these things, and that had this compound effect as well.

Maybe now is the time to begin to think about adding a new income stream to your blog. But for me, the most powerful one that I ever did is I doubled my income by adding Chitika but that went from $30 to $60 a day. It was significant at the time but it wasn't huge.

For me, the big one was when I began to do ebooks and I began to sell my own products. That's a fairly serious investment of time to create a product of my own but it paid off. I've talked about that first experience on this podcast before – overnight earning $10,000 or $15,000 when I first launched my first ebook. Over that first week, making $70,000 from that ebook. That blew my mind but I have to say that was based upon the first thing I talked about, building the traffic. You're not gonna have those massive results unless you also do number one.

Again, the first one is traffic, second one was adding a new income stream, the third one is better execution of an existing income stream or better conversion, I guess you might wanna talk about. This really does apply to almost any income stream. What you are doing presently to earn income, you could possibly do it better. There's probably some way that you can improve what you are doing. Again, this was another thing that I really focused on back in 2004.

I had these AdSense ads on my site but gradually, over time, I began to learn that I could earn more from AdSense on my site, even with the same amount of traffic. I could get better at doing AdSense. For me, Adsense, it's a about a number of things. How many ads do you have on the site? Where are they positioned on the site? What size ad units do you have? Back then, it was also the design of the ads because you can change the colors of the texts ads. There was a variety of things that I began to learn about AdSense that improved the conversion that I was getting from that. That increased my, to get a bit technical, the CPM, what I could earn per page view.

If you're running ads on your site, invest some time and energy, and maybe even some money to do a course on a how do you convert better with those ads. But the same principle applies no matter what the income stream you have. I saw this work for AdSense, I saw it work with Chitika.

I also saw it work when I began to think about how do I increase my earnings with Amazon's affiliate program. I learned that sticking widgets, Amazon affiliate widgets on my sidebar didn't really convert very well but when I mentioned the product inside my blog posts and had little calls to action that specifically said, "Get the price on this product on Amazon," that lead to an increase in conversions. I learned that creating bestseller lists of products worked really well. Again, I can link to that in today's show notes, a previous episodes where I've talked about creating bestseller links. These things led to increased conversions for me with Amazon.

The same is true for all of the different income streams. If you are selling an ebook, maybe you could convert better if you split test your sales page, run two different versions of the sales page, and there's plenty of tools around that will enable you to do that. We talked in a few episodes ago that Thrive Architect as a tool that we're using to create landing pages, that will allow you to split test different versions of a sales page. Test different headlines, test different pictures, test different calls to action, maybe you can increase the conversions that you're getting on that particular page.

If you're monetizing with sponsors, the blogger I was talking to, she'd been selling sponsored posts on her site. One of the things I encourage her to think about is what else could she be offering those sponsors in addition to the sponsored posts. Maybe she could create a little bundle of things that they could do on her site. Maybe if they pay double the price, they could get some banner ads on the site or maybe they could get a mention in her newsletter, or maybe they could run a competition with her, maybe they could do a giveaway with her audience, these extra things on top of the sponsored content.

This is one of the things that we've done over the years is begin to offer our sponsors extra stuff if they're willing to upgrade what they're spending with us. It maybe some mentions on social media, it maybe a competition we've done, all of these different types of things. We find particularly newsletter advertising works well with our advertisers as well. They're getting better results because they're not only buying a banner ad on our site but they're being mentioned in these other places which reinforces their messaging. This allows us to charge more for the ads.

What could you do to improve your conversions you're already getting? Look at your current income streams and ask yourself, "How can I grow those income streams?" It's not just about adding new ones but improving and optimizing the way that you're currently earning an income.

Another quick one that you could try if you are selling a product is to add an upsell. We did a test on this just last week. We had a launch on Digital Photography School. We had a course, 31 Days To Become A Better Photographer, makes sense to me and to some of you because we use that same sort of format on ProBlogger, 31 days. We had this course and we decided to add an upsell in the check out. The course was, I think, $49 for the course, and if you paid the extra $9, we give you an ebook. It's just like a little upsell. It was converting okay. I think the first few days we made $700 from that upsell, and that was a nice little extra $700 that we would never have had.

As I began to think about it, I was like, "$9 upsell on a $49 product, I wonder what would happen if we did an upsell of a bundle of our ebooks for a little bit more." So we tried overnight one night, we tried an upsell of three ebooks for $19. We immediately saw that that converted at a higher rate plus it was earning more because it was a higher price. We immediately saw that that led to an upswing in people taking the upsell. I think by the end of the campaign, we've made close to $7000 from that particular upsell. It was converting at a high rate.

These are all the little things that you can do and it's just about tweaking, and testing, and trying new things. Similarly, you can do an upsell after a sale. You could, in the thank you email say, "Here's another offer that you might wanna take. It's a great companion to what you've already bought." There's a variety of different ways to do that.

Tip number one was to grow your traffic. Put effort into that. That is going to set almost like a baseline, a foundation for the growth of your income. Adding a new income stream is number two which in conjunction with the traffic is great. Number three is better execution of what you're already doing, better conversions, focusing upon those tweaks that will lead to growth.

The fourth thing that you might wanna try, I've seen this work time and time again, is what I would call extra promotional activity. You could almost argue that this fits into number three as well, it's better execution. But it's where you do an extra burst of promotion of something. This particularly works if you are promoting one of your own products or if you're an affiliate as well.

For us, the best example I can give you is, I think, it was seven or eight years ago now on Digital Photography School. We started to do 12 Days of Christmas campaigns. Typically, we're launching three or four products a year and we would see big spikes in income everytime we launch a new ebook, or a new course, or when we would promote an affiliate product of someone else. I kind of came out with this idea with one of my team members to do this intense burst of promotion of all our products at the end of the year and the lead up to Christmas.

Most of you, by this time, seen 12 Days of Christmas campaigns, you possibly even run them yourself. For us, it was a matter of sending 12 emails in 12 days about each of our products, and some affiliate partners as well which is pretty intensive. It was a lot of work. It felt a bit risky because we're doing a lot of promotion over a short period of time with our audience. I was worried about our list but it led to a massive spike in income as well.

Our audience seemed to like it. They like this event that we put together. So we've run 12 Days of Christmas in different forms over the years, different times. This led to an increase in sales. I wasn't really adding a new income stream, although I guess you could call that whole campaign a new income stream, but it was really just growing the sale of our products, and the sale of affiliate partners which we were already doing anyway. It wasn't really tweaking or better execution of what were already doing, it was a new thing. It was this extra burst of promotion.

There's a variety of ways that you can do that. You can do a seasonal promotion. We just had Valentine's Day. I saw some bloggers running specials on the products that they have or some affiliate stuff around that. Christmases are our ideal time for that Black Friday, Cyber Monday. We see all these different times of the year where it's possible to do promotion. Maybe it's a seasonal promotion. Maybe it's just a flash sale. This is something we did a little bit more last year on Digital Photography School.

We decided to just do these 24 hour sales on some of our products. They didn't led to massive spikes but they did lead to increases in sales of our products. It's just a matter of looking at your calendar for the year. You've probably got some big promotions that you're doing but what goes in between them? What could you do? Something small, something targeted, something focused, that might lead to increase in sale. So a flash sale might be one way to do this.

Maybe it's about creating an autoresponder. Autoresponders are something that we've talked about numerous times over the years. I think back in episode 177, I talked about autoresponders. Autoresponders are basically a sequence of emails that you send your list. Maybe that's something that's been on your someday list. I know a lot of bloggers, that's something that they wanna do. An autoresponder could be a sequence of emails that promote your old archives which drives more traffic to your site which can lead to higher income in terms of your AdSense or it might include some promotional emails as well. Maybe setting up a new autoresponder that takes your readers through some of your archives but also promote an affiliate product or one of your own products could be useful as well.

There's some bloggers who, in their autoresponder sequences, have partnership emails. This is where they do a deal with a sponsor to have an email in their autoresponder that promotes that sponsor. That's another income stream that you might add, or if you've already got an autoresponder, and I know a lot of you do, when was the last time you added an email to that sequence? Maybe, one way that you can grow some income is simply to add one more email into your autoresponder sequence. Maybe it's an email that promotes something you've got that does almost like a little sale to anyone getting that particular email.

That's something that's worked really well for me over time as well because everyone getting that one email, anyone who's at the end of your sequence who gets this extra email, they could potentially buy what you're selling. But it's also an ongoing income stream as well. There's all the different things that you can do to promote what you do a little bit more, to drive more targeted traffic towards the thing that's converting for you.

I guess another one that you could do is potentially set-up and begin to learn about advertising your products as well. If you've got a product or an affiliate product, maybe another way that you can promote that more is to do some Facebook advertising or some Google advertising or something along those lines.

Lastly, another way to promote what you're doing more is to think about the user interface of your site and the design of your site. Maybe you've got this product in your shop or maybe you've got an affiliate product that you're promoting but no one ever knows that you're promoting that thing because you really haven't updated your menu to include the fact that you're promoting this thing. That might be another way that you might wanna try. We are redigging out our menus at the moment to be a little bit more focused on driving people to those type of activities as well.

The last one that you might wanna think about there to get more people to those activities is to create a resources page. If you go to ProBlogger and you look in our menu, you'll see resources there. On that page, we list our affiliate partners. The people we recommend for servers, and some of the tools that we use as well. That page drives affiliate income for us. Actually having a landing page that doesn't just sell one thing but sells a variety of things can be useful as well.

If you go to Smart Passive Income and look at Pat Flynn's site, you'll see that he has resource pages as well. He actually, on the front page of his site, promotes quite heavily some of his main partners as well. It really comes down to the design of your site, maybe you can actually promote what you're doing better as well.

The last thing that I wanna talk about, the fifth thing is one that, again it's a bit of a no-brainer, but it is something that's incredibly powerful and it can lead to increased income as well. That is to increase your prices or at least to change your prices because sometimes decreasing your prices can actually lead to more income as well which is a bit of strange one. But in most cases, I think considering increasing your prices can work as well. We've seen this a number of times over the years.

Digital Photography School, we were selling our courses for a long time for about $29. We realized, one, a lot of our competitors were selling courses for $300 that were very similar to our courses. I guess having seen the value in our own courses, we put a lot of time and energy into creating them but we were underpricing them. We weren't actually putting them forward at the value that they really had. As a result, some of our customers weren't actually thinking that they were any good. I remember talking to some of our customers who were buying these $300 or $400 products from our competitors. I remember having conversation with one of them, I was like, "Why do you buy that product when ours is $30?" They were like, "I just thought their product was better." And I was like, "Why?" And they were like, "Well, it's $300." There's this perception there, there's a lot of psychology behind that.

I'm not saying that you all need to 10X your prices just because it'll make people think they're more valuable. You gotta price your product at a price that is actually reasonable and that does give value to your customers. But sometimes, I think, we underprice ourselves. If you're like me maybe that's you. At our events every year, people come up to us and say, "Your event's too cheap. It's amazing what you deliver at your events for $300 or $400. There are other people charging a lot more." I have this internal battle going on. I wanna keep our event as affordable as possible so that people can come to it so it serves them, as many people as possible.

But at the same time, I know that the value that we deliver is above and beyond the price that we charge for it. It's a wrestle sometimes. If you're like me, it's probably something that you feel, but I wanna encourage you to think about increasing the prices if you're selling something. Or, connected to this, add a premium level to your product. This is something we discovered last year at our event that when we added a mastermind day to our event, that there was a certain segment of audience who were willing to pay considerably more to get a more intimate experience, a more personal experience with myself, and my team, and the speakers.

James Schramko, I think I heard him say once that there's 10% of your audience who's willing to pay 10x more than what you are charging for something that is at a higher level. I don't know if it's 10%, I don't know if it's 10x the value, but I found that to be true. There is always a segment of your audience is willing to pay more for something extra. One, they've got the budget, but two, they've got the demand. They want something extra, above what you're doing. What could you add to what you currently sell that is at a premium price? Maybe it's that more personal attention, maybe it's extra content, maybe it's more advanced, maybe it's a mastermind group of some kind. Increasing your prices can significantly help.

When we actually did increase the prices of our courses, eventually we did, we actually realized, and it's a bit of a no brainer really, but you don't need to sell as many courses to make the same amount of profit. If you can sell the same amount then you significantly your profit and your income level as well.

The other thing worth mentioning is sometimes decreasing your price can actually lead to more sales as well. That's a whole other podcast to talk about as well. But experimenting with that, you can split test your product pricing can actually be a really worthwhile thing to do to better optimize your conversions as well.

There's five things that you can do to grow the income of your blog; more traffic, a new income stream, better execution of an existing income stream to increase your conversions, extra promotional activity to really get more eyeballs on the thing that you're doing which I guess is 3.5 really, I say those two things is quite connected, and then the last thing is to play around with your pricing, particularly considering adding a premium level pricing to what you do as well.

As I've said all through this podcast, you don't have to do any of these things in isolation. It's actually probably the combination of two or three of these things that's going to lead to the growth in your business. This is the reason that I went from a very part-time blogger to a full time blogger within a few months because I worked so hard on increasing my traffic.

Over that six months, I increased my traffic significantly but I also added new income streams, and got better at what I was already doing. As a result of those three things that I focused on over those months, my income more than quadrupled over the six months. I went from being someone who dreamed of one day being a full time blogger to being a full time blogger, and actually growing the income beyond what I ever thought I would do from anything that I would ever do.

I really wanna encourage you to do that. Again, pay attention to what you already know. You probably already know the answer. It may not be doing something completely new that you never thought of, it might actually just be learning SEO, or setting up that autoresponder, or sending some emails to your list, or creating a product. These are the things that you've probably already been dreaming of doing. I encourage you to put those things on your today list instead of keeping on dreaming of doing them one day.

I hope this has been helpful to those of you who are listening. This is literally life-changing stuff. I went from, in 2004, from being part time to full time, my dreams came true because of the intense amount of action that I took over those six or so months. Your life can really change in many ways as a result of this burst of today action, just remember that, and keep at it.

If we can serve you and encourage you in any way through that process, head over to our Facebook group and let us know the questions that you have. Let us know what you've decided to do so we can keep you a bit of accountable to that as well. Just search for ProBlogger Community on Facebook and you'll find our little group as well.

Also, check out our 31 Days to Build a Better Blog course which is coming out in March. I think it's perfect alongside this particular podcast because a lot of the activities that we'll be teaching in that 31 Days to Build a Better Blog are about increasing the traffic to your site as well. That certainly is gonna help you with that. problogger.com/31days and you can sign-up to be notified when that particular course goes live.

Thanks for listening. Chat with you next week in episode 237, I think it is. Thanks for listening. Chat next week.

How did you go with today's episode?

Enjoy this podcast? Sign up to our ProBloggerPLUS newsletter to get notified of all new tutorials and podcasts.

The post 236: 5 Areas to Focus on to Grow Your Blogging Income appeared first on ProBlogger.

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

Cartoon Network

Subscribe Now

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Archives

Popular Posts

Total Pageviews

 

Copyright © 2009 Google Adsense | Blogger Template Design By Simrandeep Singh