I touched on this in my post yesterday about how every writer needs a personal website to get noticed. Backlinks (quality ones) are a very important element of SEO(Search Engine Optimization).
As you work to build your portfolio or hubs, blogs, etc. you want to be sure that you are getting links to your work to help it rank higher in search engines. You will also want to use sites like PingoMatic to "ping" out the feeds to your most recent posts.
I have also started using a site called SocialMonkee to help me build free quality backlinks. You can use it for free and submit one url for 25 backlinks per day. a Handy little tool that is very easy to use. I would suggests using it to help boost the ranks of your blog posts one at a time.
You don't want to "overpromote" websites as that can be considered "spammy" and that's not cool and will get you slapped by search engines if they catch on to you. However some promotion is necessary and required if you are going to make it in the sea of writers and marketers out there.
Other ways to get backlinks include answering questions (in a meaningful way to establish your credibility) on sites like Yahoo Answers as well. You get to talk to others, help them, and ultimately gain some name recognition in the process as well as the all important backlinks to your webpages.
You can also comment on blog posts - in a meaningful way that shows you are participating - and get backlinks to your work that way. Be sure that you are actually contributing to forums and blogs and not just spamming! Do unto others applies on the net as well - though many people seem to forget that!
This blog features the daily power words journaling exercises as well as resources for writer's of all kinds. Whether you want to freelance as a professional writer - or simply use the written word for your own purposes - this blog and my website have something to offer you.
Monday, August 15, 2011
Sunday, August 14, 2011
Every Writer Should Have a Personal Website - It's a Vital Tool!
In my latest hub I share my perspective as both a web designer and writer why a personal website is not only a good idea - but vital to building your reputation as a writer.
If any investment in yourself ever pays off this will be the one. Why? I can almost hear you say. There are several reasons
1)Establishes your credibility and gives you a professional, businesslike presence
2)Gives people a convenient place to read your work
3)Gives you a convenient place to organize and store your work
4)Helps you build traffic and increase your ad revenue and reader interest. Backlinks are vital for your business.
5)You can link your primary portfolio to other sites and cross promote, establishing a larger presence and more name recognition.
Learn all of the reasons in detail by visiting my latest hub and see how you can establish your brand for a lot less than you think. It's a time investment, but ultimately it will lead to more success for you.
Why Every Writer Needs A Personal Website
If any investment in yourself ever pays off this will be the one. Why? I can almost hear you say. There are several reasons
1)Establishes your credibility and gives you a professional, businesslike presence
2)Gives people a convenient place to read your work
3)Gives you a convenient place to organize and store your work
4)Helps you build traffic and increase your ad revenue and reader interest. Backlinks are vital for your business.
5)You can link your primary portfolio to other sites and cross promote, establishing a larger presence and more name recognition.
Learn all of the reasons in detail by visiting my latest hub and see how you can establish your brand for a lot less than you think. It's a time investment, but ultimately it will lead to more success for you.
Why Every Writer Needs A Personal Website
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Restoring Photos - Another Way to Earn Income In Addition to Writing
Even if you don't decide to do it as a sideline, it still makes a great gift idea for others - digital photo restoration!
Old photographs can be digitally archived and reworked/touched up. People will pay for this service and although there is a lot of competition - it's a great business to develop using "word of mouth". Do a few free restores for family and friends and ask them to show them off to others and give out your business card.
I do this as a small sideline business and people absolutely love to see their photographs restored - especially ones they thought were beyond repair. I have trained extensively in Photoshop and because of this I can take on some major projects that others may not be comfortable with.
Typically though you'll find plenty of old photos that really only need minimal work. I wrote a step-by-step tutorial on how to do a very basic restoration
http://christins.hubpages.com/hub/revive_photos . Check it out and see if this might help you generate some more income yourself among your friends/family.
Summer will end soon and before you know it the holiday season will be upon us. If you want a thrilling gift restore some old photos and place them on a digital frame (or have them printed) I did this for my folks last year and the looks on their faces were as the commercial says "priceless"... :)
Old photographs can be digitally archived and reworked/touched up. People will pay for this service and although there is a lot of competition - it's a great business to develop using "word of mouth". Do a few free restores for family and friends and ask them to show them off to others and give out your business card.
I do this as a small sideline business and people absolutely love to see their photographs restored - especially ones they thought were beyond repair. I have trained extensively in Photoshop and because of this I can take on some major projects that others may not be comfortable with.
Typically though you'll find plenty of old photos that really only need minimal work. I wrote a step-by-step tutorial on how to do a very basic restoration
http://christins.hubpages.com/hub/revive_photos . Check it out and see if this might help you generate some more income yourself among your friends/family.
Summer will end soon and before you know it the holiday season will be upon us. If you want a thrilling gift restore some old photos and place them on a digital frame (or have them printed) I did this for my folks last year and the looks on their faces were as the commercial says "priceless"... :)
Friday, August 5, 2011
Help me out and vote for my hub as a hub nugget award :)
My hub "9 fatal query letter mistakes and how to remedy them" has been nominated for an award. Please visit the link below and scroll down to the section on the books, literature and writing nominees and give my hub a vote if you find it to be a worthy contender :)
http://koffeeklatchgals.hubpages.com/hub/A-Step-Back-in-Time-A-HubNuggets-Tea-Party
Thank you very much I really appreciate your support
Christin
http://koffeeklatchgals.hubpages.com/hub/A-Step-Back-in-Time-A-HubNuggets-Tea-Party
Thank you very much I really appreciate your support
Christin
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
How to Outline and Write a Book Quickly
I am one of those many writers who wants to get a manuscript published. I know what I want my book to say, I am filled with ideas, but I struggle in figuring out exactly how I want to organize and present them. This makes it difficult for me to sit down and write a book, because I am stuck in a mindset that says I need to do it in "linear fashion" in much the same way I write articles or blog posts.
So what happens? I start to feel overwhelmed, and because I feel like I am standing at the bottom of a mountain looking up, I do something else because it just seems like too much to do right now... and alas the book sits in my brain and not on paper.
The hard truth is a whole book is not going to come out in perfect order without some organization in place. It will have to come in chunks and be arranged later (against my writing grain)
So this is what I have come up with and it is working very well. It breaks the whole process down into "doable" tasks that are actually fun. You get the benefit of free writing where you can explore fully multitudes of ideas because you are not worried about structure.
You can use a free software like "free mind" or use index cards or whatever you feel comfortable with.
The idea is to sit down each morning and write ten ideas - express them well and place them on a card or in your mind map software - even on notebook paper. If you're like me you'll find you don't stop right away and may come up with 20 or 30 "thought capsules" a day. Do this every day and keep the ideas all separated and don't run them together. At the end, you'll be cutting them out into little slips of paper or if you used cards and hand wrote them (something I don't have the patience for) you can simply arrange the cards in a recipe box in order.
Write whatever you like without worries about structure, grammar, spelling etc. and keep it until you are finished (usually a few weeks) and at the end print off your sheets and cut out the ideas and spend a couple of days sorting them. What goes with what? make piles and then those will essentially be your full outline... you'll have them in order and can develop your table of contents from them and all you have to do as you write your chapters is "flesh out" any ideas you didn't fully express in your notes or cards.
You can then retype them and as you do you will likely note any grammatical/spelling awkward wording and can fix that as you write the second time.
This makes a seemingly ginormous task of writing a book - more like some short daily exercises. After all 30 minutes on a treadmill is easier and much less daunting than running a marathon right out of the gate ;).
Good luck with your writing!
So what happens? I start to feel overwhelmed, and because I feel like I am standing at the bottom of a mountain looking up, I do something else because it just seems like too much to do right now... and alas the book sits in my brain and not on paper.
The hard truth is a whole book is not going to come out in perfect order without some organization in place. It will have to come in chunks and be arranged later (against my writing grain)
So this is what I have come up with and it is working very well. It breaks the whole process down into "doable" tasks that are actually fun. You get the benefit of free writing where you can explore fully multitudes of ideas because you are not worried about structure.
You can use a free software like "free mind" or use index cards or whatever you feel comfortable with.
The idea is to sit down each morning and write ten ideas - express them well and place them on a card or in your mind map software - even on notebook paper. If you're like me you'll find you don't stop right away and may come up with 20 or 30 "thought capsules" a day. Do this every day and keep the ideas all separated and don't run them together. At the end, you'll be cutting them out into little slips of paper or if you used cards and hand wrote them (something I don't have the patience for) you can simply arrange the cards in a recipe box in order.
Write whatever you like without worries about structure, grammar, spelling etc. and keep it until you are finished (usually a few weeks) and at the end print off your sheets and cut out the ideas and spend a couple of days sorting them. What goes with what? make piles and then those will essentially be your full outline... you'll have them in order and can develop your table of contents from them and all you have to do as you write your chapters is "flesh out" any ideas you didn't fully express in your notes or cards.
You can then retype them and as you do you will likely note any grammatical/spelling awkward wording and can fix that as you write the second time.
This makes a seemingly ginormous task of writing a book - more like some short daily exercises. After all 30 minutes on a treadmill is easier and much less daunting than running a marathon right out of the gate ;).
Good luck with your writing!
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