50 Ways to Take Your Blog to the Next Level

fireworks Blogging is as varied in its applications as using the telephone or taking a picture. The tool doesn’t predict the output. You might be using your blog to post recipes, or to inform the local community about information you find elsewhere on the web. Maybe you’re just trying your hand at writing, and the web is as good a place as any.

If you’re looking to go beyond that, however, you’ll need to take steps to improve your blog from at least five different perspectives. In 50 Ways to Take Your Blog to the Next Level, I wanted to share my thoughts on how you should consider your goal, your design, your content, how you promote it, and the business aspects of your blog. Please add to these ideas in the comments, and let’s grow the list out.

50 Ways to Take Your Blog to the Next Level

Make Your Goal and Target Audience Crystal Clear

My point with this entire post, but most especially this section is to ask you to admit what your real goals are with your blog. If you’re not sure, that’s fine. You might not really want to take your blog to the next level just yet. But if you’re feeling as if you want to get serious (in whatever direction that takes your efforts), give strong consideration to the following.

  1. If your goal is to be an entertainment or news blog, be very clear that it’s that and not a “fun” blog. Consider splitting off your personal or fun blog.
  2. If your blog is to be your business, treat it like that. Get into stats. Get into building audience. Get into delivering something unique. Don’t straddle back and forth on this.
  3. If the goal is to be a great community resource, mix your blogging time with time spent reaching out to the community you propose to serve. If that’s an offline opportunity, like something local, be there. Be active. Be a connector.
  4. If you’re going to be a professional about your blog, carve out the time to do it right. Never, ever, ever post a “sorry I haven’t posted lately” blog post again. Ever.
  5. Up the ante on delivering original material. Get outside the echo chamber. Writing a me-too blog isn’t the way to build your blog to the levels you seek to attain.
  6. It’s okay to use a personal voice. In fact, there’s no point blogging if you’re going to write like a cold robot. But keep personal and useful in balance.
  7. If you are attempting to do real business via your blog, look for ways to convert readers into customers.
  8. If it’s just an ad revenue business, compete, and be honest about that. Compete with others in your space for audience, value, and better deals. My point in this regard is that going halfway into the water doesn’t make you less wet.
  9. If your blog is the premier source of information for nonprofits, for photographers, for whatever, then be sure you’re scouring news feeds and finding information outside the blogosphere to keep that relationship informed.
  10. Make a point of engaging your community often in the comments section, on their blogs, on the other social networks where you cross paths.

Beauty Is More Than Skin Deep

Consider the design elements of your blog. They do change the way people perceive your work. And, they can help you improve your potential business opportunities.

  1. Get your own unique URL. It matters in the long run, especially should you choose to change hosts. For instance, if you move off a blogger account at *.blogspot.com , you lose all link equity and page rank for that domain. This means you’d have to start again from scratch. Already in that position? Make the switch now.
  2. Consider moving to a hosted blog. You can get a hosted WordPress blog set up and running for only $10 USD a year at Bloghost.me. (Note: if you use code “brogan,” you can get it for $9 a year. Andy’s a friend.)
  3. Consider using a professional theme. I am an advocate for Thesis by Chris Pearson. There are other premium themes out there, as well.
  4. Consider getting a customized WordPress theme. That link goes to Nico Pin, who designed [chrisbrogan.com]. There are others who do this kind of work, obviously.
  5. Are there several unnecessary widgets on your blog? Review them and decide which add value to your audience.
  6. Is your layout readable? Are your fonts clean and easy to read? Are your color choices all they can be? A little time with your stylesheet goes a long way.
  7. If you have ads, are you choking your community with them? Do you actually endorse the products on them? How effective have they been?
  8. Is your blog design and layout configured well for SEO? Several blogging platforms now have SEO plug-ins/add-ons to help with this. That doesn’t beat having a professional take a swing at improving your blog’s SEO, but it’s a good first step.
  9. A logo and matching favicon doesn’t hurt. You can find various price points for this, and many different people offering the service. Mine was created by Justin Evans and his team at StressLimit Design. I also have friends in California that I highly recommend, as well.
  10. Consider the graphics you post on your site. Do they add to the story you’re trying to tell? If not, seek upgrades. There are many freely available graphics at Flickr, if you search by the appropriate Creative Commons license level.

Make Your Content Top Notch

Growing quality blog posts isn’t magic. We don’t sprinkle cookies all over the house and hope that the Blogging Fairy comes along and writes us posts in exchange for the cookies. It takes lots of work, and a strong commitment. And if it doesn’t come naturally, you CAN learn how to improve.

  1. Put your blog posts on a diet. Read them with your audience in mind. Can you thin them out? Remove unnecessary words. Make them tight.
  2. Lead with the main point. If you’re attempting to be a quality news or opinion blog, make your main point at the top of the post. Don’t make us dig.
  3. Link. If you’re writing about another person, post, or website, link appropriately and thread the web. It fleshes out the story, gives us places to explore, and shows a “good neighbor” practice.
  4. Vary up post lengths. If you write a “feature length” post, have something brief come next to avoid reader fatigue. (Unless you’re writing an essay-length blog all the time, and hey, good luck.)
  5. Read. Read. Read. Get outside the blogosphere. Find sources of information that span far beyond what your competitors are covering.
  6. Get on a regular writing/posting schedule. Extra points for writing a few posts ahead of time for those days when you can’t get to it right away.
  7. Work on your titles. A great title drives visits, but also informs us as to what we’re going to learn.
  8. Refrain from “me too” posts. If you’ve got something to add, do that and link to the original post, but if you’re moving up to the next level, lose the “pointer” posts. (Your mileage may vary on this one).
  9. Consider video, audio, and rich media. If you’re doing a text-mostly blog, consider mixing it up from time to time. It might find you new audience, and it might also give people a more dimensional sense of who you are.
  10. Review your blog posts monthly to see if you’re covering the same ground. If you are, consider building an editorial calendar to post from, so that you don’t overlap and repeat topics too often.

Promoting Your Blog

No one loves someone who talks about themselves all the time, but if you’re going to work on bringing your blog up a few notches, make sure your efforts aren’t for nothing.


  1. Use a social bookmarking plugin like AddThis or Share This on your blog posts so that people who like your work can share it easily.
  2. Make a very prominent option to subscribe by email available on your site. More than 50% of my readers do so via email.
  3. Add your blog URL to your email signature.
  4. Make sure your blog URL is on your twitter profile, your facebook profile, added into Friendfeed, and several other outposts. This helps people discover you who might not have noticed your work before. (Note: Steve Rubel said that to me many months back. He told me that he “discovered” my blog via Facebook. I’ve been a believer ever since.)
  5. If you’re going to promote your blog via places like Twitter, be sure to do it tastefully instead of just dumping links into the stream. Consider asking a question, or pointing out a rather insightful comment.
  6. Make sure you’re doing the basics, like listing your site in Yahoo!, Google, DMOZ, and claiming it in Technorati.com (each of those sites shows you how via the help function).
  7. Commenting on other well-known blogs in your same space in a not-spammy way is a great way for people who might like your work to discover you. Don’t put blatant links or otherwise be rude. Just be thoughtful and helpful to the community at that site, and leave a useful comment. They’ll come, if they like what you said.
  8. Don’t forget posting the occasional blog post in LinkedIn’s status message. It reaches some interesting people from time to time.
  9. Is it fair to Digg or Stumble your own posts? There are mixed opinions on this. I’ve had little to no success with Digg in this regard. StumbleUpon is a different story. Decide for yourself if you think this is okay to do. I’ve heard it called “patting yourself on the back in public.”
  10. Write the occasional post that’s worthy of bookmarking. When someone adds a blog post of mine to Delicious, I often get lots more traffic than from other promotional angles.

Building Business From Your Blog

You might be trying to make money from your blog directly, perhaps through advertising or affiliate marketing. Or you might be seeking to establish thought leadership and promote consulting opportunities. You might be simply looking to drive even better awareness of a social cause or have a nonprofit or educational motive in mind. In any case, think of “business” to mean “value beyond the blogging itself.”

  1. Build conversion opportunities. If you’re selling something directly, think of clever ways to post about it that educate, inform, and encourage a call to action.
  2. Make sure your blog design points people towards the action you want them to take. (See Financial Aid Podcast for an easy example).
  3. Ask for the sale. If you’re selling something, don’t be shy. Ask for it. Do so in a blog post, or in an ad of your own creation. Be direct and honest about this.
  4. Mix free value and additional opportunities. If you’re selling something that’s not unlike what’s available on your blog for free, demonstrate the dividing line. Even consider giving a hint of what’s on the other side.
  5. Make it easy to opt in. Like asking for the sale, make sure you help your prospective customers/cleints/partners know how to get into your sales funnel, should they be interested.
  6. Make content that sells. If you’re blogging or posting video to promote a business objective, work at building the content such that it drives that end decision. Too 1.0 for you? At least open conversations up about what you’re trying to accomplish.
  7. Make it very easy to contact you. Make your About page very clean and easy to read. Put some real human names on the website, and even consider adding a photo, so that people know who they’re addressing. (I say this all the time, but I see so many examples daily of people who could use this advice.)
  8. Build relationships with similar blogs and share opportunities. If you’re blogging about real estate, get to know the other real estate bloggers and learn from each other.
  9. Give “serving suggestions” on your blog. If you’re blogging a particular kind of offering, is there a way to share what it does, or how you want to be involved?
  10. Remember: even if your blog’s main goal is selling, be human, be interesting, be involved. This isn’t the old Internet. We have these nifty social tools that remind us to be human. Let’s use them that way.

My goal in writing this was to offer advice and suggestions for how one might transform their blog from “another one in the pack” to something of a destination on the web. It’s not my opinion that we should all be following this advice. There are several blogs that I love exactly the way they are, and I’m sure their respective owners do, too.

We all do this for different reasons, and one size does not fit all. For those of you who DO intend their blog to be an authoritative, professional-minded presence on the web, I hope this helps.

Do you have something more to add? What’s your take? What have I missed completely? What other questions to you have?

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Related posts:

  1. Nine Ways to Promote Your Blog Posts
  2. Two More Ways to Share This Blog
  3. Blogging Advice for the Next Level
  4. Writing Effective Blog Posts
  5. 50 Ways Marketers Can use Social Media to Improve Their Marketing

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  • http://www.zeichenblog.biz Lexy

    Thank you for your posting, Chris.
    I think you stated many useful tips. In my opinion it is very important that you define your blog and that you really want and enjoy the writing you do in order to perform well.

    However, my biggest problem is the definition part, because without a clear definition of the goals you want to reach and the audience you want to adress, you cannot apply any of your tips. My blog was initally a birthday present from my brother because he knows I can write quite well and that I am a creative person. So I started writing about personal topics and then mainly about journeys I did, but as you said “No one loves someone who talks about themselves all the time”, I am desperately looking for a way to adjust my blog, to find an interesting and enjoyable topic to write about. That is not as easy as it seems, because I think if you once decided what to write about (e.g. medical field or media or customer advice or traveling) you should stick with it.

    Greetings,
    Lexy

  • http://www.zeichenblog.biz Lexy

    Thank you for your posting, Chris.
    I think you stated many useful tips. In my opinion it is very important that you define your blog and that you really want and enjoy the writing you do in order to perform well.

    However, my biggest problem is the definition part, because without a clear definition of the goals you want to reach and the audience you want to adress, you cannot apply any of your tips. My blog was initally a birthday present from my brother because he knows I can write quite well and that I am a creative person. So I started writing about personal topics and then mainly about journeys I did, but as you said “No one loves someone who talks about themselves all the time”, I am desperately looking for a way to adjust my blog, to find an interesting and enjoyable topic to write about. That is not as easy as it seems, because I think if you once decided what to write about (e.g. medical field or media or customer advice or traveling) you should stick with it.

    Greetings,
    Lexy

  • http://www.analyzedmarketing.com/blog Internet Marketing Blog

    Wow Chris, this is a great post! Each point you list is valid and as such should definitely be considered by any blog owner.

    This is a great refresher for anyone to return to in keeping with their blogging efforts.

  • http://www.analyzedmarketing.com/blog Internet Marketing Blog

    Wow Chris, this is a great post! Each point you list is valid and as such should definitely be considered by any blog owner.

    This is a great refresher for anyone to return to in keeping with their blogging efforts.

  • http://connectionintersection.com The Connection Intersection

    Chris,

    Many thanks for this fantastic list. I appreciate your assistance in curing me of my blog envy when visiting blogs like yours and helping me to identify ways to improve my own. So many useful nuggets here; I’m inspired to put some of them into action right away.

    Irene

  • http://connectionintersection.com The Connection Intersection

    Chris,

    Many thanks for this fantastic list. I appreciate your assistance in curing me of my blog envy when visiting blogs like yours and helping me to identify ways to improve my own. So many useful nuggets here; I’m inspired to put some of them into action right away.

    Irene

  • http://qwidget.com/blog mike

    Another great list. Your lists are a great combination of things I intuitively know but need to be reminded of and really interesting perspectives that I hadn’t thought of yet. Thanks for the effort you’re putting in. Also, i’m pretty shocked that half of your subscribers get your feed via email. I don’t even know what to make of that. i’d think way more would be via RSS. I’d love to see you write a post about the psychology behind the fact that half of the people who subscribe to your tech-focused blog use what many consider to be an inefficient even outdated subscription method. Or am I being too close-minded about email subscriptions?

  • http://qwidget.com/blog mike

    Another great list. Your lists are a great combination of things I intuitively know but need to be reminded of and really interesting perspectives that I hadn’t thought of yet. Thanks for the effort you’re putting in. Also, i’m pretty shocked that half of your subscribers get your feed via email. I don’t even know what to make of that. i’d think way more would be via RSS. I’d love to see you write a post about the psychology behind the fact that half of the people who subscribe to your tech-focused blog use what many consider to be an inefficient even outdated subscription method. Or am I being too close-minded about email subscriptions?

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  • http://kikolani.com Kristi

    Great list of tips. :)

  • http://kikolani.com Kristi

    Great list of tips. :)

  • http://www.catcancook.com Catherine

    This was such a great help and inspiration to me. Thanks so much for sharing your wisdom here, for those of us who run successful blogs, but want OUTSTANDING ones!

  • http://www.catcancook.com Catherine

    This was such a great help and inspiration to me. Thanks so much for sharing your wisdom here, for those of us who run successful blogs, but want OUTSTANDING ones!

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  • http://www.danomi.com Che

    Great list Chris. Glad you mentioned blog design. Its importance is often overlooked and under estimated. If you aren’t sure about your goals in the beginning try 2 or 3 until niches until you know which is for you.

  • http://www.danomi.com Che

    Great list Chris. Glad you mentioned blog design. Its importance is often overlooked and under estimated. If you aren’t sure about your goals in the beginning try 2 or 3 until niches until you know which is for you.

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  • http://beaconcreations.typepad.com Kia

    Chris, this is handsdown the BEST blog about blogging I have read anywhere on the web thus far!! You have hit upon so many topics it’s almost like “where do I begin” I will be doing a systematic implementation of quite a few of your ideas. New bloggers like me are intimidated by this whole “blogosphere” lol.

    One thing I have noticed is that if you have a business website with a linked blog, most of those authors wite concise blogs with information tidbits and lots of pictures. Visually stimulating.

    Anyway, keep up the great work.

  • http://beaconcreations.typepad.com Kia

    Chris, this is handsdown the BEST blog about blogging I have read anywhere on the web thus far!! You have hit upon so many topics it’s almost like “where do I begin” I will be doing a systematic implementation of quite a few of your ideas. New bloggers like me are intimidated by this whole “blogosphere” lol.

    One thing I have noticed is that if you have a business website with a linked blog, most of those authors wite concise blogs with information tidbits and lots of pictures. Visually stimulating.

    Anyway, keep up the great work.

  • http://authorstoolsblog.com/promotion/why-do-you-write Lynn Jordan–Author’s Tools

    These are all great tips. We need to keep in mind that we need to provide value to our readers.

    @Jeoen de Miranda, a disadvantage of hosting your own blog is that you have to do the WordPress upgrades yourself.

    However, if you use a blog hosting company, a complaint can shut you down.

    If you are using your own domain name (and you should be), then a host change won’t make any difference in your page rank or other SEO factors.

  • http://authorstoolsblog.com/promotion/why-do-you-write Lynn Jordan–Author’s Tools

    These are all great tips. We need to keep in mind that we need to provide value to our readers.

    @Jeoen de Miranda, a disadvantage of hosting your own blog is that you have to do the WordPress upgrades yourself.

    However, if you use a blog hosting company, a complaint can shut you down.

    If you are using your own domain name (and you should be), then a host change won’t make any difference in your page rank or other SEO factors.

  • http://ariwriter.com Ari Herzog

    Craig:

    Seeing as nobody else responded to you yet, my take is a company blog should be a group effort and not the voice of one person. That’s where your question about voices comes into play.

    Also, keep in mind SEO is not just about blogs but websites too.

  • http://www.ariwriter.com Ari Herzog

    Craig:

    Seeing as nobody else responded to you yet, my take is a company blog should be a group effort and not the voice of one person. That’s where your question about voices comes into play.

    Also, keep in mind SEO is not just about blogs but websites too.

  • http://qtp.blogspot.com sachin

    It is the first article which I have read completely from top to bottom after many months..thanks great

  • http://qtp.blogspot.com sachin

    It is the first article which I have read completely from top to bottom after many months..thanks great

  • http://www.adollarsigndollarsign.blogspot.com Jayme

    Hey Chris,

    Great list. All were very helpful. I’m just getting into the blogger world and I find that different blog hosts have different options (I’m on blogspot, which I’m a big fan of). Any sites specifically on how to spruce up this service and what features there are? Still learning this world, but loving it none the less.

    Thanks for your wisdom. I look forward to reading much more…

    Jayme

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  • http://www.adollarsigndollarsign.blogspot.com Jayme

    Hey Chris,

    Great list. All were very helpful. I’m just getting into the blogger world and I find that different blog hosts have different options (I’m on blogspot, which I’m a big fan of). Any sites specifically on how to spruce up this service and what features there are? Still learning this world, but loving it none the less.

    Thanks for your wisdom. I look forward to reading much more…

    Jayme

  • http://lamediahostia.blogspot.com/ Ismael Valladolid Torres

    Great post. I really do mean, great, great post!

    “Already in that position? Make the switch now.”

    Are you suggesting that I should get rid of my PR4 Blogger blog and move to a hosted blog with a unique URL? What’s so bad about being hosted in a blogspot.com domain, apart from a few SEO directories not accepting it?

  • http://lamediahostia.blogspot.com/ Ismael Valladolid Torres

    Great post. I really do mean, great, great post!

    “Already in that position? Make the switch now.”

    Are you suggesting that I should get rid of my PR4 Blogger blog and move to a hosted blog with a unique URL? What’s so bad about being hosted in a blogspot.com domain, apart from a few SEO directories not accepting it?

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  • http://chrisbrogan.com chrisbrogan

    Wow! Lots of great comments and ideas here. Thanks to everyone who shared.

    Sorry I wasn’t more active here in the comments section yesterday. I had to work from home *and* play Mr. Mom to the kids yesterday, so as you were all coming in and being nice, I was doing a lot of playing with trains, getting cups of water, and trying to report back to the office in between.

    @Lexy – there are exceptions to every rule. A great memoir author is one example. They can talk about themselves all the time. David Sedaris, for instance, or Ann Handley.

    @Craig – Ari answered already, but my take would be that it’s almost vital that a company take a view of their industry if they’re going to blog. Mike Volpe at Hubspot does that well. So do Marcel LeBrun and David Alston from Radian6. Tim O’Reilly is VERY active in the space where he works, and outside of topics that relate directly to his company.

    @Ari- thanks for the other sources of photos. I had forgotten about Wikimedia Commons, but you’re right. Another great source.

    Thanks everyon!

  • http://chrisbrogan.com chrisbrogan

    Wow! Lots of great comments and ideas here. Thanks to everyone who shared.

    Sorry I wasn’t more active here in the comments section yesterday. I had to work from home *and* play Mr. Mom to the kids yesterday, so as you were all coming in and being nice, I was doing a lot of playing with trains, getting cups of water, and trying to report back to the office in between.

    @Lexy – there are exceptions to every rule. A great memoir author is one example. They can talk about themselves all the time. David Sedaris, for instance, or Ann Handley.

    @Craig – Ari answered already, but my take would be that it’s almost vital that a company take a view of their industry if they’re going to blog. Mike Volpe at Hubspot does that well. So do Marcel LeBrun and David Alston from Radian6. Tim O’Reilly is VERY active in the space where he works, and outside of topics that relate directly to his company.

    @Ari- thanks for the other sources of photos. I had forgotten about Wikimedia Commons, but you’re right. Another great source.

    Thanks everyon!

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  • Aakriti

    Thanks for yet another educating & articulate post Chris!

  • Aakriti

    Thanks for yet another educating & articulate post Chris!

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  • http://www.sermonzone.com/blog Bruce Baker

    Thanks for the great article. There are several ideas I will use on my blog to build traffic.

  • http://www.sermonzone.com/blog Bruce Baker

    Thanks for the great article. There are several ideas I will use on my blog to build traffic.

  • http://www.halfwaytonormal.com/ Kristin Tennant

    Thanks for this post. I’m working on building my “author’s platform,” at the request of a publisher who is interested in my book proposal, so I especially appreciated your advice for “Promoting Your Blog.”(I did it all backwards: wrote the book first, then found out I really needed to establish a blog and audience! Now I’m catching up. Sigh.)

    But I find myself really resisting the first section of your post: “Make Your Goal and Target Audience Crystal Clear.” I am a copywriter and brand consultant by trade, so I fully get the importance of this when it comes to building strong brands for my clients. But when it comes to building a strong personal brand (which is really what this is about), I question whether it’s absolutely necessary to make things “crystal clear.”

    I, for instance, write a lot about having gone through a divorce, but I’ve been told by countless people who have never been divorced that they really connect with my stories. I also write about my faith, and how I’m working out issues with God along the way, but I definitely don’t want to attract only a Christian audience. The irony is that everything I’ve worked to sort out in my life has led me to un-defining myself, or “living a life in between,” as I like to call it. And marketing calls for just the opposite.

    So is it going to be really difficult for me to find and attract my audience? Or do you think this approach can work?

  • http://www.halfwaytonormal.com/ Kristin Tennant

    Thanks for this post. I’m working on building my “author’s platform,” at the request of a publisher who is interested in my book proposal, so I especially appreciated your advice for “Promoting Your Blog.”(I did it all backwards: wrote the book first, then found out I really needed to establish a blog and audience! Now I’m catching up. Sigh.)

    But I find myself really resisting the first section of your post: “Make Your Goal and Target Audience Crystal Clear.” I am a copywriter and brand consultant by trade, so I fully get the importance of this when it comes to building strong brands for my clients. But when it comes to building a strong personal brand (which is really what this is about), I question whether it’s absolutely necessary to make things “crystal clear.”

    I, for instance, write a lot about having gone through a divorce, but I’ve been told by countless people who have never been divorced that they really connect with my stories. I also write about my faith, and how I’m working out issues with God along the way, but I definitely don’t want to attract only a Christian audience. The irony is that everything I’ve worked to sort out in my life has led me to un-defining myself, or “living a life in between,” as I like to call it. And marketing calls for just the opposite.

    So is it going to be really difficult for me to find and attract my audience? Or do you think this approach can work?

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  • http://www.jameskurtz.com James Kurtz III

    Great article and advice! I’ve been making a habit of number 37 and have seen good results thus far. Now I really need to focus on creating better content once readers are there. Oh, if only there were more hours in a day!

  • http://www.jameskurtz.com James Kurtz III

    Great article and advice! I’ve been making a habit of number 37 and have seen good results thus far. Now I really need to focus on creating better content once readers are there. Oh, if only there were more hours in a day!

  • http://www.bhotechnologists.com/calendar-for-digital-picture-frames Photo Calendar Guy

    On #43: Don’t forget to make the initial sales as easy as possible for your prospect. Let them get to know you and your product(s) with “little” to “no” risk. I know that for some offerings this may not be possible; but, when you can…do so.

  • http://www.bhotechnologists.com/calendar-for-digital-picture-frames Photo Calendar Guy

    On #43: Don’t forget to make the initial sales as easy as possible for your prospect. Let them get to know you and your product(s) with “little” to “no” risk. I know that for some offerings this may not be possible; but, when you can…do so.

  • http://baltimoreseo-by-murph.com/ Murph

    Some great tips! It’s always tough to find the time to sit down and comment and promote your own blog, even as an “SEO” consultant. It’s like an auto mechanic driving around an old rustbucket.