27 Blogging Secrets to Power Your Community

magician Do you like learning about magic tricks? To me, the best magicians are the ones who share what they know. Penn and Teller are like that. They love deconstructing tricks in front of you? So, do you want to learn some blogging secrets from me?

If I say they’re secrets, you’ll treasure them more, but the thing is, I share this with you daily. I do it right in front of you. But just this once, I’ll slow it down, and walk through it all. Fair?

27 Blogging Secrets to Power Your Community

Starter Moves

Failing that, posts with numbers seem to work. Especially weird or odd numbers. 27 is odd.

  1. A picture per blog post has been my trick for a while. It draws your eye, whether or not you want it to. We’re wired for it. I use Flickr Creative Commons photos to do that. (Make sure you give them adequate credit. I show that in this post, too.)
  2. Did you ever notice most of my posts open by asking a question? That’s a secret. When I do that, you stop and think about the question. But more importantly, it shifts your mind to the “what’s in it for me” sphere that you started reading from in the first place. Make sense?
  3. Break things up visually. Notice that I have an H3 tag (html speak) title repeating the top title, and that I’m using a list to give your eye some natural “chunking.” Go back and read cafe-shaped conversations for an example.
  4. Oh, maybe I should’ve started the post by saying that it helps if you write something useful for people. People want posts they can use to improve themselves or their business.
  5. Brevity rules. I mention this a lot. People just don’t read long posts (usually). There are exceptions. I read every word Ann Handley writes, and often wish for more.
  6. Write “unfinished” posts. Having ways that others can add to a post or improve on it invites participation. This might just mean asking for ideas or getting a sense of what others’ experiences are.
  7. Mix up the length of your posts, so that people can read varied length articles, like magazines and newspapers do.
  8. Consider an editorial calendar, where you write down which TYPE of blog posts you’ve written lately, and which you intend to write. This helps you from doing recurring posts, and gives some variety to what you’re writing.


Technical Stuff

  1. A nice clean blogging theme goes a long way. I’m a huge fan of Thesis for WordPress (so much so that I became an affiliate for it).
  2. Make it easy for people to subscribe to your post. Most people stop at putting a big orange RSS button up in the corner of their blog. Check out my sidebar. Check out the Financial Aid Podcast. Look how many ways we show people how to stay connected to the community. That’s not by accident.
  3. I’ve said it before. Claim your blog in Technorati. You don’t have to like Technorati. You don’t have to think it works well. But it triggers mechanisms you need.
  4. Consider changing your permalinks structure. (In WordPress, this is in Settings/Permalinks. Where is it in MT or Blogger?) I learned this from Chris Pearson. Change it to custom and put /%postname%/. If you click on any post including this one, you’ll see it all written out in plain English without extra info. (This is a preference).
  5. If you worry that a post might get “lifted,” or if you encourage people to repost your work with attribution (which I encourage), include a few links in the original post that will politely show people where the content came from. I learned this from Christopher S. Penn.
  6. Consider every plugin and widget. Do they improve your blog or slow it down? Do they help you blog smarter?
  7. Learn a little more HTML, just a bit. Learn how to make links, how to add photos, how to bold and italicize things, and that. If you’re stuck, Google or “view source” on blogs that do what you want to accomplish. (For example, I had to learn how to stop and start a numbered list with ol start=”10″ to write this.)
  8. Don’t force people to register for an account to comment on the blog. Lots of people won’t. (Your mileage may vary, but corporations try this all the time because they’re worried about someone leaving a “your company sucks” comment on the blog. It doesn’t fix that. It slows down real discourse.)
  9. Technology should serve your community and your content, not just be there. Consider every technological change with that lens.


The Bonus Round

  1. Share your posts politely via social platforms. In Twitter, I usually ask a question, and provide a link to the blog post to see what people think. I don’t “blurt” the blog posts automatically. Not every post is worth Twitter.
  2. Facebook has tools like Simplaris Blogcast that integrate your blog into Facebook. So does LinkedIn. This falls into my outposts strategy.
  3. Link out to other blogs often.
  4. Comment on other blogs often. Thoughtfully. Adding thoughtful comments to other people’s posts builds friendships. I was a passionate commenter on Copyblogger back when I had 10 subscribers on my blog. Brian was still really nice to me.
  5. Remember to comment in your own comments section. Conversations with your readers turn them from readers into a community.
  6. Showcase your community. I do this with my Rockstars page (which needs updating) and by taking the occasional guest post.
  7. Be consistent. You don’t have to blog daily, but if you blog once a week, get at least a post a week. Need blog topics?
  8. Repoint to the old stuff occasionally. It’s often still useful to new community members.
  9. Keep giving. When you can’t think of what else to give, give some more. Being helpful is the #1 thing you can do for your community. Share your secrets. You can’t execute them all anyhow.

Need more? I have a collection of my best advice about blogging.

Your Ideas

What would you add to the list? Which blogging secrets have helped you? Are there any questions my thoughts gave you that I didn’t adequately answer? Let’s talk about it more.

(Oh, and that’s a secret, too).

Photo credit, Trials and Errors

Related posts:

  1. Ten Secrets to Better Blogging
  2. Keeping the Blogging Fires Burning
  3. The Power of THIS Community
  4. Basic Business Blogging Suggestions
  5. 20 Blogging Projects for You

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  • http://BuckingtheRealEstateTrend.com Susie Blackmon

    It’s an omen to get up on January 1 and have the privilege of reading this great post, and an inspiration. Thank you for your generosity and guidance. It would make my year to be someone you admire once I fine tune my work through lurking around ChrisBrogan.com. All the best, and even more success to you in 2009.

  • http://BuckingtheRealEstateTrend.com Susie Blackmon

    It’s an omen to get up on January 1 and have the privilege of reading this great post, and an inspiration. Thank you for your generosity and guidance. It would make my year to be someone you admire once I fine tune my work through lurking around ChrisBrogan.com. All the best, and even more success to you in 2009.

  • http://www.musingsofahousewife.com Musings of a Housewife

    This is an awesome list. I have it bookmarked so I can refer to it again. I’ve heard about your blog, but this is my first read. Now I’m subscribed! :-)

  • http://www.musingsofahousewife.com Musings of a Housewife

    This is an awesome list. I have it bookmarked so I can refer to it again. I’ve heard about your blog, but this is my first read. Now I’m subscribed! :-)

  • http://notadiylife.blogspot.com Heather @ Not a DIY LIfe

    First time visiting your site. Thanks so much for the helpful hints. I know there are at least a few things I need to change about my blogging (like commenting more!).

    Happy New Year!

  • http://notadiylife.blogspot.com Heather @ Not a DIY LIfe

    First time visiting your site. Thanks so much for the helpful hints. I know there are at least a few things I need to change about my blogging (like commenting more!).

    Happy New Year!

  • http://www.personalbranding.pl Michał Mościcki (Poland)

    Need more? Excellent words of advice: “Personal Branding for the Business Professional” by Chris Brognan. Have simple, useful, crisp business cards to share… Make contact personal branding in Poland too and narrative marketing: http://www.marketingnarracyjny.pl. Here are some elements “marketing narracyjny metodą E.Mistewicza”, it’s useful and valuable to others.

  • http://www.personalbranding.pl Michał Mościcki (Poland)

    Need more? Excellent words of advice: “Personal Branding for the Business Professional” by Chris Brognan. Have simple, useful, crisp business cards to share… Make contact personal branding in Poland too and narrative marketing: http://www.marketingnarracyjny.pl. Here are some elements “marketing narracyjny metodą E.Mistewicza”, it’s useful and valuable to others.

  • http://communityorganizer20.wordpress.com/ Debra Askanase

    Well, Chris, I’m nervous but doing it…my first post on someone’s blog that I don’t know personally. (But I’m such a big fan I had to drop by.) I started a professional blog about two weeks ago, and searched your site for tips. The best one I found was the advice you offered about always keeping a few blog posts “in the back pocket” for when ideas aren’t flowing. In the short time I’ve been blogging, I’ve used that. The addendum to this advice might be: don’t throw away drafts! I’ve gone back to drafts I was sure I’d never post and reworked them into entirely different posts.

  • http://communityorganizer20.wordpress.com/ Debra Askanase

    Well, Chris, I’m nervous but doing it…my first post on someone’s blog that I don’t know personally. (But I’m such a big fan I had to drop by.) I started a professional blog about two weeks ago, and searched your site for tips. The best one I found was the advice you offered about always keeping a few blog posts “in the back pocket” for when ideas aren’t flowing. In the short time I’ve been blogging, I’ve used that. The addendum to this advice might be: don’t throw away drafts! I’ve gone back to drafts I was sure I’d never post and reworked them into entirely different posts.

  • http://careerjolt.net Jerry Roberts

    Hey Chris,

    If you send your blog to Facebook and/or LinkedIn, or elsewhere, doesn’t that flag Google and bring on a duplicate content penalty?

    I like the showcase for your community. Nice idea.

    Overall, a very good post. Thanks.

  • http://careerjolt.net Jerry Roberts

    Hey Chris,

    If you send your blog to Facebook and/or LinkedIn, or elsewhere, doesn’t that flag Google and bring on a duplicate content penalty?

    I like the showcase for your community. Nice idea.

    Overall, a very good post. Thanks.

  • http://smartadvise.info ShriNagesh

    That’s a wonderful round-up of the most important things about blogging, though it never occured to me about the editorial calendar.

  • http://smartadvise.info ShriNagesh

    That’s a wonderful round-up of the most important things about blogging, though it never occured to me about the editorial calendar.

  • http://www.pauljroberts.com Paul J Roberts

    Chris,

    As usual, excellent list of advice. I don’t think you left anything out! Some of them I’ve been implementing into my new blog and personal branding process. I am now working on blog format by trying to figure out H-tags, linking and getting my blog out there. I appreciate the advice you have given in that area as well.

    Next. Building killer content….. bring it on!

  • http://www.pauljroberts.com Paul J Roberts

    Chris,

    As usual, excellent list of advice. I don’t think you left anything out! Some of them I’ve been implementing into my new blog and personal branding process. I am now working on blog format by trying to figure out H-tags, linking and getting my blog out there. I appreciate the advice you have given in that area as well.

    Next. Building killer content….. bring it on!

  • http://toddrjordan.com/thebroadbrush Todd Jordan

    Chris,

    You’ve been doing a great job this year. This tip list is a great round up. Some of these I’ve already been doing and can second your recommendations on. Others I’ll be giving a try.

    A favorite of mine from your list is linking out to other blogs. This definitely fuels the network.

    Another favorite is the no registration required note. I’ve not commented on blogs this year where I really loved the post because a registration for that blog was required.

    Cheers to a great 2009.

  • http://toddrjordan.com/thebroadbrush Todd Jordan

    Chris,

    You’ve been doing a great job this year. This tip list is a great round up. Some of these I’ve already been doing and can second your recommendations on. Others I’ll be giving a try.

    A favorite of mine from your list is linking out to other blogs. This definitely fuels the network.

    Another favorite is the no registration required note. I’ve not commented on blogs this year where I really loved the post because a registration for that blog was required.

    Cheers to a great 2009.

  • http://www.socialmediablogster.com Doug Firebaugh

    Greta post dude! Amazing as usual! And learning as always- happy 2009! 27 Gold Nuggets to take into the new year!

  • http://www.socialmediablogster.com Doug Firebaugh

    Greta post dude! Amazing as usual! And learning as always- happy 2009! 27 Gold Nuggets to take into the new year!

  • Brian

    Thank you for the great suggestions, being “new” to starting a blog this will be a great help!

  • Brian

    Thank you for the great suggestions, being “new” to starting a blog this will be a great help!

  • Judy H. Wright aka Auntie Arti

    Okay guy, this is the kick in the rear end I needed to recommit to writing every day on my blog. There are so many things needing attention that when I don’t focus, I am too scattered to do justice to any one thing. Blogging is connecting to community. Hey, my niche is relationships, duh! Better connect.

    thanks for reminding me.

    Judy H. Wright aka Auntie Artichoke, family relationship coach and author

  • http:///www.ArtichokePress.com Judy H. Wright aka Auntie Artichoke, the storytelling trainer

    Okay guy, this is the kick in the rear end I needed to recommit to writing every day on my blog. There are so many things needing attention that when I don’t focus, I am too scattered to do justice to any one thing. Blogging is connecting to community. Hey, my niche is relationships, duh! Better connect.

    thanks for reminding me.

    Judy H. Wright aka Auntie Artichoke, family relationship coach and author

  • http://575488trillion.com Walter Paul Bebirian

    Now all that is needed in this world is a way to use all of these secret tools – and have everyone following them plus have time to do something other than writing blogs and reading everyone else’s comments –

    Any secrets for that?

    Walter :-)

  • http://575488trillion.com Walter Paul Bebirian

    Now all that is needed in this world is a way to use all of these secret tools – and have everyone following them plus have time to do something other than writing blogs and reading everyone else’s comments –

    Any secrets for that?

    Walter :-)

  • Forrest McDonald

    Chris – as someone entering the blogosphere very recently I can say your advice is helpful from a practical sense and encouraging from an emotional sense. Seeing a list of things which appear pretty easy to complete and will help improve your success is motivating.

    Thanks for working to help us achieve our goals.

  • Forrest McDonald

    Chris – as someone entering the blogosphere very recently I can say your advice is helpful from a practical sense and encouraging from an emotional sense. Seeing a list of things which appear pretty easy to complete and will help improve your success is motivating.

    Thanks for working to help us achieve our goals.

  • Jeff Korhan

    Chris – Great stuff as usual.

    My fav is not making people login to comment. That’s crazy. Who has the time.

    Surprised you don’t mention video. You did one on that snowstorm, right? Video has been huge for me. I do it because I’m a speaker and feel people want to see me in action, even if its staged in my office. In fact, I think the key to video in a blogging format is to keep it unpolished and real.

    Best part of video is it makes me work a little bit harder on the post to ensure BOTH the vid and the text are tight and relevant to the reader. For this reason, I have to keep the posts weekly at http://www.therightwayworks.com

    Thanks for keeping it real,

    Jeff Korhan

  • http://speaker@truenature.com Jeff Korhan

    Chris – Great stuff as usual.

    My fav is not making people login to comment. That’s crazy. Who has the time.

    Surprised you don’t mention video. You did one on that snowstorm, right? Video has been huge for me. I do it because I’m a speaker and feel people want to see me in action, even if its staged in my office. In fact, I think the key to video in a blogging format is to keep it unpolished and real.

    Best part of video is it makes me work a little bit harder on the post to ensure BOTH the vid and the text are tight and relevant to the reader. For this reason, I have to keep the posts weekly at http://www.therightwayworks.com

    Thanks for keeping it real,

    Jeff Korhan

  • http://www.reachpersonalbranding.com williamarruda

    Hello Chris,

    You always provide so much value in each of your posts. Thank you. You really walk your talk.

    I love all of your ‘secrets’, especially number 23. If as a blogger you create posts but don’t engage with your readership, you are missing out on the most important part of blogging – building community. What makes blogging so exciting is that you can start and continue a conversation – and everyone who is part of that conversation benefits and grows.

    When I left my corporate job and started my own business, I loved the independence, but felt isolated. I started my company, Reach Personal Branding, eight years ago – long before blogs. I missed the sense of community I had in the office. Now, the feeling of community has been restored thanks to my Blog (and the others that I read and contribute to regularly – like this one!). I have engaged with so many people that I would otherwise not even know and it has been good for my business and great for my personal fulfillment. Thanks again for another valuable post!

    Happy New Year!!

    Best.
    William
    http://www.williamarruda.com

  • http://www.reachcc.com William Arruda

    Hello Chris,

    You always provide so much value in each of your posts. Thank you. You really walk your talk.

    I love all of your ‘secrets’, especially number 23. If as a blogger you create posts but don’t engage with your readership, you are missing out on the most important part of blogging – building community. What makes blogging so exciting is that you can start and continue a conversation – and everyone who is part of that conversation benefits and grows.

    When I left my corporate job and started my own business, I loved the independence, but felt isolated. I started my company, Reach Personal Branding, eight years ago – long before blogs. I missed the sense of community I had in the office. Now, the feeling of community has been restored thanks to my Blog (and the others that I read and contribute to regularly – like this one!). I have engaged with so many people that I would otherwise not even know and it has been good for my business and great for my personal fulfillment. Thanks again for another valuable post!

    Happy New Year!!

    Best.
    William
    http://www.williamarruda.com

  • http://lichtman.ca Anonymous

    I have to say that this blog entry made me really think hard about how I was approaching blogging. Thanks again Chris!

  • http://lichtman.ca Jeremy

    I have to say that this blog entry made me really think hard about how I was approaching blogging. Thanks again Chris!

  • http://itorganization2017.wordpress.com/ Vaughan Merlyn

    Given your latest post “No Comment” I feel obliged to go back and comment on this post – it is truly superb! Through my own experience and instincts, I already follow many of these suggestions (about one half) so that leaves me with at least 14 new ways to become a more effective blogger! That’s quite a gift that you have provided to the blogosphere!

    And while I’m at it, I must also say that your blog is one of those that I read just about daily. Which reminds me – time to go update my own blogroll!

    Thanks, Chris – keep up the great and highly informative and stimulating work!

  • http://itorganization2017.wordpress.com/ Vaughan Merlyn

    Given your latest post “No Comment” I feel obliged to go back and comment on this post – it is truly superb! Through my own experience and instincts, I already follow many of these suggestions (about one half) so that leaves me with at least 14 new ways to become a more effective blogger! That’s quite a gift that you have provided to the blogosphere!

    And while I’m at it, I must also say that your blog is one of those that I read just about daily. Which reminds me – time to go update my own blogroll!

    Thanks, Chris – keep up the great and highly informative and stimulating work!

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  • http://ecotourismleavingfootprints.blogspot.com/ Guillaume

    Great Post, agree with all the rules and already doing most of them, so it makes me happy! I think you could have added time is the number one rules. If you are serious about our blog, it will take you a lot of time, this is a real commitment.

  • http://ecotourismleavingfootprints.blogspot.com/ Guillaume

    Great Post, agree with all the rules and already doing most of them, so it makes me happy! I think you could have added time is the number one rules. If you are serious about our blog, it will take you a lot of time, this is a real commitment.

  • http://www.cooper-taylor.com/blog @kiwicarol (Carol Cooper-Taylo

    I’ve been following your blog for the last few months Chris, I really appreciate your pragmatic approach. I have been blogging for some time and don’t get many comments on my blog, so if you or your readers would care to take and look at my blog and give me some feedback on how to improve I’d be really chuffed.

  • http://www.cooper-taylor.com/blog @kiwicarol (Carol Cooper-Taylor)

    I’ve been following your blog for the last few months Chris, I really appreciate your pragmatic approach. I have been blogging for some time and don’t get many comments on my blog, so if you or your readers would care to take and look at my blog and give me some feedback on how to improve I’d be really chuffed.

  • http://bestwebsitetips.com/ Lisa Wood

    Thanks for the great tips, Chris. I especially liked the one about putting links in for when someone uses your content. I’ll keep that in mind.

  • http://bestwebsitetips.com/ Lisa Wood

    Thanks for the great tips, Chris. I especially liked the one about putting links in for when someone uses your content. I’ll keep that in mind.

  • http://theresidualincomelifestyle.com Timothy Carter

    I am never amazed at the incredible tips and ideas you give man! I’m thrilled to have stumbled across your site in 2008…continued success in 2009 powering your community and impacting mine! :)

  • http://theresidualincomelifestyle.com Timothy Carter

    I am never amazed at the incredible tips and ideas you give man! I’m thrilled to have stumbled across your site in 2008…continued success in 2009 powering your community and impacting mine! :)

  • http://twitter.com/loveurmindnsoul Thao Ly

    Great post, thanks for the tips

  • http://twitter.com/loveurmindnsoul Thao Ly

    Great post, thanks for the tips

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  • http://www.geekandhype.com Joffrey

    This post rocks, really! And wow, now I know that I am not a very good blogger… But maybe your tips don’t fit to all blogs? I think that some of those secrets would not be a great idea for mine.