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    Posted by Amanda on April 30, 2007 | Comments (15)

    Guestblog by: Amy

    If you’re looking for a way to make your site a bit more popular, try reading it. I’ve noticed online that a lot of people don’t proof read their entries and they’re full of typos, spelling mistakes, grammar mistakes, and completely devoid of punctuation. No matter how good your design and content may be, if it can’t be read easily enough many people will simply give up.

    While reading an interview on this site, I saw a lot of carelessness in the subject’s responses. Between not making full sentences, leaving out punctuation, and one word (or number) answers, I myself couldn’t finish reading it. And after reading it, I certainly wouldn’t go to his site. Why would you agree to an interview if you’re not going to put any effort into it?

    Punctuation is the #1 reason I stop reading a blog. When you talk, do you keep talking? Or do you pause for a second, catch a breath? That, my dears, is where you enter a comma. Or a period, however the mood strikes you. And when you comma for a side note, make sure you comma again before getting back to the original idea. You don’t need to be perfect, I know I’m not, but the effort needs to be there.

    Grammar is also important. I read on a website that people who have English as a second language often speak better because they’ve had to learn why. That’s not completely true, I remember middle school English class. We’ve all learned the same information about the language. It’s not that we’ve never had the chance, or that we don’t know it. It’s that it’s simply not habit. A bit more effort may just help you get the extra links you need.

    Free Spell Checker: http://www.spellcheck.net/
    Punctuation Tips: http://www.lrcom.com/tips/punctuation.htm
    Grammar Tips: http://www.webgrammar.com/grammartips.html

      Posted by Amanda on March 26, 2007 | Comments (14)

      Randa Clay is a designer and marketing consultant providing a complete package of services that includes custom web site design, blog design and template customization, as well as custom logo design, print design and production. You can find her at any of these websites: randaclay.com , randaclay.com/lumps , printables4scrapbooking.com, freestuff4kids.net

      5 ways to find out what your readers are interested in reading

      There is a quote by Alice MacDougall that says “In business you get what you want by giving other people what they want.” I would say this goes for blogging as well. Bloggers want readers. The way to get and keep your readers is to consistently give them the information they’re interested in. How do you find out what they’re interested in? Here are 5 ways:

      1. Do you have a search form on your page? (you should) What are readers searching for? For example, I have a kids site where I have coloring pages, word searches, etc., and when I see in my stats that someone has entered something like “play money” in the search form, I make some printable play money and post it at the next opportunity.

      2. What are your most popular posts? What posts have gotten the most comments? Write more like that.

      3. Do a WordTracker trial or a search on Overture’s keyword tool around your main keywords. What are people searching for the most? Write posts around the items you find that are within the scope of your site.

      4. Install MyBlogLog on your site and use the member pages to find out what other blogs your readers frequent, along with other things about them such as what they’ve tagged on del.icio.us, for example.

      5. Where does your target audience hang out? What forums do they participate in? What problems are being discussed there? What are the topic areas in the forum? These should give you ideas about what your readers are interested in and what problems they’re trying to solve.

      Now, I’m not trying to say if your blog is about underwater basketweaving, that if you find out a large number of your readers are interested in claymation that you should suddenly write lots of posts about claymation (you could start another blog about claymation and cross-promote them though). What I am saying is that if you find out that your readers are most interested in the different materials to weave their baskets with, spend more time writing about that than methods of drying out the baskets when they’re complete!

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