How to get traffic for your blog
My friend Fred, a talented blogger, asked me for advice the other day. Here's a partial answer, with a few apologies to Swift:
- Use lists.
- Be topical... write posts that need to be read right now.
- Learn enough to become the expert in your field.
- Break news.
- Be timeless... write posts that will be readable in a year.
- Be among the first with a great blog on your topic, then encourage others to blog on the same topic.
- Share your expertise generously so people recognize it and depend on you.
- Announce news.
- Write short, pithy posts.
- Encourage your readers to help you manipulate the technorati top blog list.
- Don't write about your cat, your boyfriend or your kids.
- Write long, definitive posts.
- Write about your kids.
- Be snarky. Write nearly libelous things about fellow bloggers, daring them to respond (with links back to you) on their blog.
- Be sycophantic. Share linklove and expect some back.
- Include polls, meters and other eye candy.
- Tag your posts. Use del.ico.us.
- Coin a term or two.
- Do email interviews with the well-known.
- Answer your email.
- Use photos. Salacious ones are best.
- Be anonymous.
- Encourage your readers to digg your posts. (and to use furl and reddit). Do it with every post.
- Post your photos on flickr.
- Encourage your readers to subscribe by RSS.
- Start at the beginning and take your readers through a months-long education.
- Include comments so your blog becomes a virtual water cooler that feeds itself.
- Assume that every day is the beginning, because you always have new readers.
- Highlight your best posts on your Squidoo lens.
- Point to useful but little-known resources.
- Write about stuff that appeals to the majority of current blog readers--like gadgets and web 2.0.
- Write about Google.
- Have relevant ads that are even better than your content.
- Don't include comments, people will cross post their responses.
- Write posts that each include dozens of trackbacks to dozens of blog posts so that people will notice you.
- Run no ads.
- Keep tweaking your template to make it include every conceivable bell or whistle.
- Write about blogging.
- Digest the good ideas of other people, all day, every day.
- Invent a whole new kind of art or interaction.
- Post on weekdays, because there are more readers.
- Write about a never-ending parade of different topics so you don't bore your readers.
- Post on weekends, because there are fewer new posts.
- Don't interrupt your writing with a lot of links.
- Dress your blog (fonts and design) as well as you would dress yourself for a meeting with a stranger.
- Edit yourself. Ruthlessly.
- Don't promote yourself and your business or your books or your projects at the expense of the reader's attention.
- Be patient.
- Give credit to those that inspired, it makes your writing more useful.
- Ping technorati. Or have someone smarter than me tell you how to do it automatically.
- Write about only one thing, in ever-deepening detail, so you become definitive.
- Write in English.
- Better, write in Chinese.
- Write about obscure stuff that appeals to an obsessed minority.
- Don't be boring.
- Write stuff that people want to read and share.

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You might be familiar already with New York Times
bestselling author Charlaine Harris who made a name for herself
with her fun and wacky Sookie Stackhouse series. (If you haven't
had the pleasure, check out her books Dead as a Doornail and
Living Dead in Dallas). In her new book, Grave
Surprise, the follow-up to Harris's 2005 supernatural caper
Grave Sight, Harper Connelly must defend her reputation as a
clairvoyant. And when esteemed professor and rival Clyde Nunley
turns up dead, she must also defend her innocence. Each page is
filled with the author's trademark wit and affinity for odd and
amusing characters. Not surprisingly, this book has a huge
crossover appeal for fans of supernatural fiction, thrillers and
who-done-its. And, if you ask us, we think this will be her biggest
hit yet. Just in time for Halloween!
One part love story, one part historical fiction, The Last Van
Gogh by Alyson Richman (The Mask Carver's Son, Swedish
Tango) tells the story of the famous artist's final days and
his clandestine relationship with Marguerite Gachet, his doctor's
young daughter. Since her mother's death, 20-year-old Marguerite
has grown up attending to her brother, father and the steady stream
of artists who find their way to her family's house in the charming
French village of Auvers-sur-Oise to seek treatment. It is here
that she finds herself taken with Van Gogh, whom she describes as
"a rare blend of vulnerability and bravado." As their affair
unfolds, Marguerite uncovers a family secret that changes
everything she thought she knew. Meticulously researched, Richman's
newest novel will be a huge hit, especially with fans of Girl
with a Pearl Earring.
Three crucifixions. Three continents. And one secret that could
destroy the faith of billions. Called "The Da Vinci Code on
steroids" by USA Today, Chris Kuzneski's harrowing new novel
is breathlessly fast-paced, suspenseful and, yes, a serious
page-turner. Sign of the Cross opens in modern-day Denmark
with a Vatican priest found dead on a cross. The next day the very
same crime is repeated in Asia and Africa. At the same time,
maverick archeologist Dr. Charles Boyd unearths a secret
2,000-year-old scroll whose contents betray a centuries-old
cover-up. What follows is a spine-tingling chase across the globe
as more priests turn up dead, alliances shift and Boyd becomes the
most wanted criminal in Europe.
based on 87 reviews