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ProBlogger: Why Nobody Reads Your Content and What to do About it

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ProBlogger: Why Nobody Reads Your Content and What to do About it

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Why Nobody Reads Your Content and What to do About it

Posted: 20 Jul 2022 11:42 PM PDT

The post Why Nobody Reads Your Content and What to do About it appeared first on ProBlogger.

Why Nobody Reads Your Content and What to do About it

Photo by Brands&People on Unsplash

Question: How do people read online?

Answer: They don’t read, they scan.

In research on how people read websites it’s been found that 79% of users first scanned any new page they came across and only 16% read word-by-word. Knowing this, how should bloggers who want to reach an audience and communicate effectively write?

 

Why do people scan?

Chances are that not everyone who comes across your blog will already be a devoted reader. These new visitors want to find out quickly whether reading what you’ve written is a worthwhile investment of their time.

Studies have also shown that reading from a screen is more tiring and therefore about 25% slower than reading from paper – hence scanning becomes a technique that most employ.

People read online by scanning the page for individual words or phrases, headings and other visual cues.

 

Is your Blog Scannable ?

It’s a pretty simple thing to test:

  • Ask a friend who is not familiar with your site to take a quick look at a few of your recent posts
  • Give them 15 to 30 seconds on each post
  • At the end of which you ask them what the post was about

You’ll quickly get a sense of how they’ve interacted with your blog.

 

Techniques to Make your Blog Scannable

Good bloggers keep this in mind as they write and will employ a variety of techniques to make their posts easier to read.

Some of these techniques include…

 

8. Make your key point up front

If you have a key point make sure you say it up front. One trap many of us fall into is to bury our main points deep within content where it’s unlikely to be noticed.

(In fact I just moved this point up from number 8 on the list)

If not in the title and opening line, get your message across in the first few sentences. You can expand upon it later.

 

1. Lists

Anecdotal evidence here at ProBlogger suggests:

  • My posts with bullet point lists in them get linked to A LOT more
  • Than similar length posts written in more of an essay style
  • This post has a list built into it – you’re reading number 1 of 10 points

 

2. Formatting

Use bold, CAPITALS, italics, underlining, teletext and to emphasize points.

DON’T GO OVERBOARD AS YOU RUN THE RISK OF FRUSTRATING YOUR READER.

Also consider changing font size, color and style to draw your readers eyes to your main points.

 

3. Headings

and Sub Headings

Large, bold words that act as visual cues of what is happening in the content are effective ways of drawing readers further into articles.

 

4. Pictures

Research shows that readers eyes are drawn down the page by pictures. Place them cleverly by your key points (especially when they closely relate to the content) and you have more of a chance of getting readers to read full articles.

Why Nobody Reads Your Content and What to do About it

Photo by Drew Beamer on Unsplash

 


5. Borders/Block quotes

Boxes around quotes and key points can similarly get the attention of readers.


 

6. Space

 

Don’t feel you have to fill up every inch of your screen.

 

Rather, create spaces because they help readers not to feel overwhelmed

 

and tend to draw readers eyes

 

to what is inside such space.

 

7. Get to the Point

Be succinct with your points.

 

9. Find creative ways to reinforce your main point throughout your post

For example – this post is itself an example of using scannable techniques to reinforce the need to use scannable techniques.

 

10. Don’t introduce too many new ideas in one post

(I could tell you many more ways to create scannable content, but 10 is probably enough for now)

This helps to avoid overwhelming readers with information all at once.

If you want to cover many ideas that relate to one another consider a series of posts that link to each other.

If your site and its posts are not easily scannable you run the risk of losing your reader to another blog that is.

 

This article was first published on August 19, 2005 and updated July 21, 2022.

The post Why Nobody Reads Your Content and What to do About it appeared first on ProBlogger.

     

ProBlogger: 11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience

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ProBlogger: 11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience

Link to ProBlogger

11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience

Posted: 14 Jul 2022 12:15 AM PDT

The post 11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience appeared first on ProBlogger.

11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience

Photo by Duy Pham on Unsplash

Have you ever experienced being very connected to a blogger?

For me, there's been several times over the years where it's felt like a blogger is talking directly to me through their writing and/or podcasting. Some content creators just seem to have that sense of who is on the other side of their content and the ability to draw their reader/listener/viewer into (almost) a conversation in the way that they communicate.

A personal example of this is a podcaster called Rob Bell, who every time I listen to him, it feels like he is directly talking to me. This is probably because he has a similar background to me and he's talking on topics that I'm interested in but it's also in his personal and engaging delivery.

Whether or not you have ever had this experience, I think it's really interesting and important to examine what these content creators do to create this connection to them. Certainly some people have a natural ability for creating this personal connection. But for the rest of us, I think there's some learnings that we can adapt and use ourselves to create a more personal experience for your blog's audience.

What I want to share in this article is 11 tips for creating that personal connection, techniques that I've observed from other content creators and things I've tried myself and have worked with my audience.

 

1. Tell Personal Stories

Storytelling is a very engaging technique – people love stories and the more you can tell your own stories the more relatable you will become. The stories you tell don't have to be very personal heartfelt stories (although they can be), but any story that shows you've had some experience with the topic you're talking about creates a powerful, relatable connection in your reader.

Here's 14 types of stories you can tell on your blog.

11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience

Photo by Kevin Erdvig on Unsplash

2. Write Like You Speak

Everyone's style of writing is going to be a little different, but for me, I find that when I write in a conversational style I am a much better communicator. If you've heard me present at a conference or listened to my podcast, you'll know that I speak in a very conversational tone. And I've found that when I use this style of writing I get a lot more feedback – blog comments and emails from my readers – than when I have adopted a more formal, authoritative "professor"-like tone. 

For more about how to write like a human, listen to this interview I did with Beth Dunn.

 

3. Use Personal Language

This is just a little tweak to the way you write that makes a big difference to how it's received by your reader. Anytime you can use the word "you" in your writing or presentations is a very powerful thing. For example, the title of this blog post is “11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience" rather than (the depersonalised) "…. an audience…". This tweak immediately makes your reader think about their own experience and makes it personal rather than theoretical. As soon as you start addressing your reader personally, they start applying what you're saying to them and their own situation and making it specific and particular.

 

4. Picture Your Reader

When you start picturing your reader/listener/viewer rather than just typing words on your computer, speaking into your microphone or presenting to camera, you will immediately personalize your message, delivery and style. A very useful technique to bring your reader alive is to create a reader avatar and then have that avatar present in front of you when you create content for them.

Here's How to create a Reader Avatar for Your Blog

 

11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience

5. Address Real Reader Needs

One of the things you will identify as part of creating your reader avatar is what their needs are. Of course you can draw upon your own experiences, issues and problems with your topic, but you should also be asking your readers questions to find out what issues they have. You could set up a survey (if you have a big enough audience), ask questions on your blog, on your email list or via social media to find out what your readers' needs, challenges, dreams, motivations are. The more you understand what your readers need, the more you will know who they are (and they will know that you know) and the more you'll be able to address their specific issues.

 

6. Write About Your Readers Feelings, Fears and Dreams

When you get feedback from your readers on what their needs are, you will get ideas for topics to address but just as (if not more) importantly, you will also get a feel for what they're feeling. You may need to read between the lines of your audience's responses. 

For example I asked my audience in relation to blogging:

  • What’s your biggest dream?
  • What's your biggest challenge?

I put all their responses into two word clouds (one for "Dreams", one for "Challenges") to identify what themes were coming out. Yes, there were topics like "Traffic", "Content", "SEO" but there were also feelings like "Fear", "Afraid", "Scared" that were shared in the context of the topic: eg "I'm scared of SEO". By unearthing these feelings I was able to write with more empathy and weave into my content an emotional connection with my audience.

An example of content I produced as a result of this was a podcast episode about ​​Dealing with Imposter Syndrome.

 

7. Go Off-Topic from Time to Time

On my two main blogs ProBlogger and Digital Photography School, I rarely go off-topic, but if you look at my Instagram or Twitter account, also on my Podcast and my newsletter, you'll see that I go off-topic and include more personal mentions of other things besides blogging and photography. These off-topic mentions can create more resonance and relatability with your audience.

 

8. Use Multi-Media

Use different types of media to humanize yourself. If you're just writing you can write in a personal tone; but if you add a photo of yourself your audience can see your face; when you use audio they can hear your voice; video animates you as a person and people can see your body language, pick up on your energy, enthusiasm, your sense of humor… and live-video can ramp up the things by adding audience interaction and engagement as well. Granted, all these things aren't for everyone (some of these things are scary for people to do) but anything you can do to personalize your message is going to help.

Here's what happened when my wife, who started blogging anonymously, began to share more of herself with her audience: How Posting a Humble Selfie Grew Traffic, Shares and Comments on a New Blog

11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience

9. Attend Events

One of the most powerful things I did in the early days of my blogging was to attend events that were relevant to the topics of my blog. This may require some time and investment if you're attending in-person events, but there are also many online meet-ups and events these days. Attending relevant events and interacting with people will help you understand your readers' needs and how they might be feeling. Even if you don't meet any of your actual readers, you will be meeting people like them and this will tell you a lot and help you to create more personal content.

 

10. Work on Interaction

A reader once told me at an event that she had been reading the ProBlogger Blog for many years but never felt any personal connection. It was only when she joined the ProBlogger Community Facebook Group and left her first comment that the blog really came alive to her and felt a more personal connection to me because she did something. A lot of your readers will be very passive – they'll read/listen/watch your content but not say anything. 

Anytime you can get people to: like something; leave a comment; join a group; send you an email; subscribe; vote in a poll… it gets them a little bit more engaged and to put themselves out there and as a result it becomes a more personal experience for them and they become more connected to you. So call people to action! And when they do interact with you, it’s really important you acknowledge their interaction and respond to them. Even if you interact with a small group of your audience, other people in your audience will see that and feel included too.

 

11. Create Content from the Heart

One of the best things you can do in creating content is to allow yourself to feel something about what you're writing or talking about. Writing about topics that interest you is one thing, but writing about subjects that you feel something about takes them to a whole different level. Not every post you produce needs to be an emotional, from-the-heart piece. But do allow yourself from time-to-time to tap into your emotions – whether it's an angry rant, a sad or uplifting story. Allow yourself to feel something and to express this emotion and you will create a deeper connection with your readers.

"No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader. No surprise for the writer, no surprise for the reader." – Robert Frost

One example of my own content that went there was when I talked about the humiliating wake up call that changed my life and my blog. It came from the heart and I got so much response from that.

11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience

 

If you're not willing to be personal with your readers, they won't be personal with you. They take your lead. It's so important to model what you want from your readers and for you to create the personal experience and connection with your audience that they are looking for from you.

 

Now, it's your turn… Tell me what you think. Have you seen examples of bloggers creating a personal experience with their audience? Have you tried any of these techniques (or others) yourself? What happened?

 

Creating more personal connection is one way to build community with your audience. For more ways to go beyond engagement and unlock the power of community ProBlogger's Build Community Course will help you transform your casual group of readers into a mob of raving fans.

11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience

The post 11 Tips to Create a Personal Connection with Your Audience appeared first on ProBlogger.

     

ProBlogger: How to Turn Your Business Blog Readers Into Paying Customers

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ProBlogger: How to Turn Your Business Blog Readers Into Paying Customers

Link to ProBlogger

How to Turn Your Business Blog Readers Into Paying Customers

Posted: 06 Jul 2022 05:01 PM PDT

The post How to Turn Your Business Blog Readers Into Paying Customers appeared first on ProBlogger.

How to Turn Your Business Blog Readers Into Paying Customers

Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash

This is a guest contribution from Alicia Rades.

You started a blog for your business because you recognized the importance of content marketing. You know that businesses that blog get more traffic than those that don't.

But more traffic doesn't necessarily mean more customers. You have to be able to leverage your blog content in a way that convinces readers to trust you and buy from you.

So how do you get readers to pay for your product or service?

Start with these five tactics you can use in your blog posts today.

1. Weave Testimonials Into Your Content

People are naturally skeptical when businesses talk about themselves or how great their product is. They're more likely to trust their own peers—people who are just like them. In fact, the statistics show that written testimonials can increase conversions by as much as 25 percent. Leverage this powerful marketing tactic by weaving customer testimonials into your content.

Don't just insert quotes where they're not needed, though. Use them to tell your story.

This approach is particularly effective when writing case studies. You can also use it to back up claims. For example, let's say you offer social media management services. You're writing a post about converting followers on Instagram, and one of your tips discusses optimizing your profile. Maybe you just helped a client with this, and it doubled their followers in two weeks. To add credibility to your advice and show that it actually works, you could include a testimonial from that client.

In this example, the testimonial supports the content without it being a direct sales pitch for your services. It gives the story a fresh voice from someone your readers can relate closely to, which helps customers put more confidence in your claims, your business, and your service.

2. Use Your Blog as a Platform to Host Deals

Hosting deals on your blog does two things:

  • It encourages readers to shop when they may not have otherwise spent money on your product.
  • It allows you to gather people's email addresses, who you can market and sell to in the future.

For the best conversion rates, consider teaming up with other companies to offer everyone's product in a bundle and at a super low price. Not only does it make the offer more appealing, but you'll all benefit from reaching each other's user bases.

Here's an example from Time-Warp Wife. In this giveaway, over 100 homemaking bloggers came together to offer nearly $700 worth of eBooks for only $29.97. And to further encourage sales, the deal was only good for six days.

ebook bundle

Of course, you don't need to team with over 100 other bloggers to see success. Host a deal with 3-5 other people in your field, and post the info on your blog to entice readers to buy.

3. Include In-Line Product Links

When the opportunity presents itself, point a couple of links back to relevant products or services on your site. This gets readers to visit your product pages to move them down the sales funnel.

The idea here isn't to blatantly promote your products. Your blog posts shouldn't be a sales pitch. However, links to relevant sales pages can actually be useful to readers who are interested in applying the advice in your blog post.

If it will be helpful to your readers, you can also present the product link as a "side note." Here's an example of how freelance writing coach Elna Cain handles this approach. She presents her product as a solution to writers' struggles without focusing the entire post on her course.

elna cain

Use this tactic sparingly so you don't overwhelm your readers, and make sure you're only linking where it's relevant so readers know what to expect when they click the link.

4. Write Strong Calls to Action

Every blog post should end with some sort of call to action (CTA). You might encourage readers to:

  • Leave a blog post comment
  • Sign up for your newsletter
  • Visit a page on your website
  • Follow or share on social media

If your goal is to sell to your readers, then your call to action should point them to the next point in the sales funnel. For example, they might be interested but not ready to buy yet. You might ask them to subscribe to your newsletter or sign up for a free webinar so you can turn them into paying customers in the future.

You could also position your product or service as a solution to the topic in your blog post. Point them to your "how it works" page to get them to learn more and sign up.

Be bold with your calls to action. Tell readers exactly what to do next, and use your website design to your advantage. You can use a custom call to action for each post with an in-line link or CTA button, or you can place a universal CTA widget below each post.

Here's an example from Blogging Wizard that illustrates both options. Adam Connell encourages readers to leave a comment, but he also uses a CTA widget to promote newsletter sign-ups.

blogging wizard

5. Don't Be Overly Promotional

The key to getting all of this to work is to avoid being overly promotional. Yes, your purpose is to sell. But blog readers aren't looking for a sales pitch. Trying too hard to sell to them through your blog posts only pushes them away.

Instead, focus on providing advice to your readers. Show them what their problem is (they may not even know they're struggling or what they're struggling with). Suggest ways to fix it. Then briefly show that you have the solution. It's only after that that the sales pitch comes into play. If you help them first, you'll gain their trust, and they'll be more likely to buy from you in the future.

You won't use all five of these tips in every blog post you write, but incorporating them where you can will help turn readers into paying customers. Which one of these suggestions will you try out first? Let me know in the comments.

Alicia Rades is a professional freelance blog writer who specializes in blogging, writing, and freelancing topics. Visit her site at aliciarades.com, where you can download her free blogging guide, 20 Questions to Ask Yourself Before Hitting Publish.

This article was first Published on September 8, 2016 and updated July 7, 2022.

The post How to Turn Your Business Blog Readers Into Paying Customers appeared first on ProBlogger.

     

ProBlogger: Discover a New Way to Protect Yourself from Data-Loss Nightmares

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ProBlogger: Discover a New Way to Protect Yourself from Data-Loss Nightmares

Link to ProBlogger

Discover a New Way to Protect Yourself from Data-Loss Nightmares

Posted: 30 Jun 2022 06:54 AM PDT

The post Discover a New Way to Protect Yourself from Data-Loss Nightmares appeared first on ProBlogger.

Discover a New Way to Protect Yourself from Data-Loss Nightmares

Photo by Cookie the Pom on Unsplash

How do you backup your computer/s?

This past month I’ve changed my approach and I wish I’d done it earlier. In this article I’ll tell you why I’ve switched.

For many years I’ve used hard drives onsite at my house and have then backed up those drives to others offsite at a family member’s house. The problems with this are numerous.

Maybe you can relate.

Discover a New Way to Protect Yourself from Data-Loss Nightmares

Photo by Lorenzo Herrera on Unsplash

So Much Data

Firstly – the size of our backups keeps growing as we take more photos, videos and create more docs. While some of these can backup to the cloud you can end up with bits of backups everywhere (iCloud, google drive, dropbox…. you get the picture).

I decided a few years ago to let iCloud backup all our phones photos, videos and other data – but prefer to have all computer’s data somewhere else (because iCloud gets expensive) and they have a 2TB limit per account!). To have it all in the one place means I have to keep getting bigger hard drives every few years. And it’s not just one drive – I like to have a backup of the backup!

Back in the day I was able to back everything up onto a drive of 500GB… those days are long gone. This is partly because digital camera sensors keep getting bigger (and so their files take more space) and we’re also creating bigger files because our kids are using more and more multi-media at school and for fun.

Of course we now also have five of us (2 parents, 3 children in our household) creating stuff to take up space! Our house has six active computers (soon to be seven when our youngest starts high school) and our eldest is now making short films as part of his study. All up we’ve got something like 16TB of files on our computers!

Hard Drives Fail

Another issue with hard drives is that every few years I find one of them will fail. As a result I’m not just buying new ones because they’re not big enough – but to replace the corrupted ones. So it’s all become something of a mess. I’m not overly technical so setting up a backup system was taking time and I was juggling hard drives to make sure they were big enough and then trying to manage backing up the backups and taking them over to my family’s house…. arrrrgggh!

For a few years now I’ve been waking up in the night – wondering if all our photos would be ok if we had a fire and stressed that a crucial drive would break.

The anxiety was real!

Discover a New Way to Protect Yourself from Data-Loss Nightmares

Photo by Vincent Botta on Unsplash

Cloud Solution

I’ve wondered for a while whether a backup to the cloud might be a solution and started looking at the options. This week I bit the bullet and decided to back up one of the computers to the cloud – to see how long it would take and how hard it was.

I chose Backblaze as the service to test. Every review I read said they were simple to use, had a free trial and best of all were cheap (just $7 a month with unlimited data)! Sounds good to me!

You can check out what they offer here: https://problo.gr/Backblaze

Disclaimer: that is an affiliate link meaning I get a commission if you decide to make a purchase through my link, at no cost to you – but I’m a paying customer already. The commission is just 70cents if you sign up so I’m not expecting to get rich from this.

Let me tell you how I found the process.

It was SOOOO easy!

Backup Process

You literally install an app to your computer, give the app permission to access your files and before you know it it is already at work backing up your files. You can tell it not to back up certain parts of your computer if you like but as I mentioned above there is no limit to how much you can back up – $7 per computer even if that device has a TONNE of stuff on it.

The backup upload was actually pretty quick. This will vary depending on internet speed but ours isn’t super fast and my 1st computer (1.5TB) uploaded in 24 hours. It self throttles if you’re using your computer for other things and I didn’t really notice anything slowing down. Since then I’ve noticed it updates continuously as needed.

In terms of getting files if you need them – there are a few ways you can do it. Login to Backblaze and you’ll see all your files and folders – just as they appear on your hard drive. If there’s just a single file you need you can download it or if you want more than that you can download small to medium sized folders as a zip file. If you need it all there’s options to get them to send you everything as a hard drive (worst case scenario).

I’m not going to back up all of our computers to Backblaze ($7 per computer is reasonable but it will add up). My thinking is that I’ll back up my two computers to it – they’ve got a lot of data and contain important stuff (all our family photos and my work stuff). I will most likely keep backing up my wife and younger kids’ computers to local hard drives but will most likely backup my eldest’s to Backblaze as he has a lot of data on his computer too.

In time I may bring everything into the cloud as hard drives fail – we’ll see!

Discover a New Way to Protect Yourself from Data-Loss Nightmares

Photo by Alexander Sinn on Unsplash

Try it Yourself

If you're losing sleep worrying about your files (or you know you should be backing up but aren't) check out Backblaze.

They have a 15 day free trial to give it a go.

 

Darren Rowse

PS: for the last few weeks I’ve not had one night where I’ve woken up worried about my files!

The post Discover a New Way to Protect Yourself from Data-Loss Nightmares appeared first on ProBlogger.

     

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