Google+ Callista's Ramblings
Showing posts with label blogathon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogathon. Show all posts

Friday, January 25, 2013

The Winter Blogathon 2013 Has Officially Begun!

blogathonwinter[2]Wooohoo!

A whole weekend devoted to blogging, my kind of paradise! It’s time for the third blogathon hosted by me from one of my other blogs, Biannual Blogathon Bash. It’s not too late to join! If you want to work on your blogging to-do list sometime this weekend with support, mini challenges and prizes, click on over!

This is my official kick off post to mark that I am starting work on my blog. Some of it you may see and lots of you won’t as I have behind the scenes work to do. I am also not only working on this blog. I will be working on:

and deciding the fate of and if keeping, working on

I have a LOT I want to accomplish, including but not limited to:

  1. Decide fate of blogs mentioned above
  2. Make up blogging binder/planner and organize myself (this will take a LONG WHILE)
  3. Write up as many reviews as I can (at least 5)
  4. Do sponsored posts (2 I think)
  5. Update kathleengarber.com
  6. Brainstorm ideas for Bloggers Building Bridges
  7. Update Google+
  8. Transfer Callista’s Ramblings to Wordpress
  9. Plan Editorial Calendar for all blogs
  10. Brainstorm Content Pieces

You can track our progress on twitter by watching the #blogathon2 hashtag. Or better yet, if you are a blogger, join us! You don’t have to commit to the whole weekend and there are lots of different things you could do!

Friday, June 22, 2012

Boost Your Blog Design With No Budget #blogathon2

Biannual Blogathon BashThis is a mini challenge for the Biannual Blogathon Bash, a twice yearly blogging marathon but anyone is welcome to read and use the information. However if you are signed up for the blogathon or you sign up and participate before the end of the blogathon, completing this mini challenge improves your chances of winning a prize. The blogathon is June 22-25. If you are participating in the blogathon, please do not complete this challenge until the blogathon has started.

My blog has been around for about 8 years and it has gone through many changes with regards to it’s looks. It was once just a lowly plain blog with a regular free blogger template.

Boost Your Blog Design With No Budget #blogathon2

Then I had taught myself to make very basic graphics and learned how to add my own header and it was a plain blog with a header. Eventually I learned how to do more small things and they added together and then a few years ago a blogger friend who was still fairly new to designing blogs offered to design my blog for free which is what you see now. She also did SMS Nonfiction Book Reviews. The design has done me well for a few years but I will be switching to wordpress and when I do, I will be getting a new design as well and I am excited!

Even if you are at the beginning stage where you don’t know how to edit your free blogger or wordpress (or other site) template or you know a few things but don’t have the money for a designer, you can make some simple changes to improve the look of your blog and make it:
  1. More Professional Looking
  2. More Attractive to the Eye
  3. Different From All the Other Blogs
NOTE: I link to other bloggers who talk about what I’m talking about throughout this post. Why repeat what has already been said so well?

Simple Steps to a Better Blog Design

  1. Header – It shouldn’t take up the whole screen, nor should it be so small you can’t read it. It should also be as wide as your blog is.  It should be unique, it should have your blog name and tag line. Nicole explains well. Use some free graphics programs online (such as picmonkey.com or ipiccy.com to create something yourself for free. HOWEVER before using any images in your header, make sure you are using them without breaking copyright. Try OpenClipart.
  2. Sidebar – A common mistake is to make it too cluttered. We want to show off all the groups and events we join and funny graphics that show our personality and stuff. It’s easy to get carried away though. Look at the blogs who you consider very well designed and professional looking. Look at their sidebars. Compare with yours. See a difference? See this mini challenge from last year for tips on cleaning up your sidebar. Also make sure  your sidebar widgets lines up.
  3. Free Backgrounds – There are websites with tons of different backgrounds that are easy to implement. Sure there can still be blogs out there with the same background but it’s more rare than when you just have the free themes/templates that came with your blog. Try Cutest Blog on the Block, Hot Bliggity BlogSimply Blog It Backgrounds, Shabby Blogs or Background Fairy.
  4. Social Media – Make it easy to find you on twitter, Facebook, Google+, Pinterest and the others. The Facebook like box and such are nice for ease of following but you should have small icons at the TOP of your blog that link directly to the sites as well. They should all be from the same creator too (If my social media buttons still look all different, then it’s because I haven’t updated mine yet. They look much better on my nonfiction blog.)
  5. Contact – You don’t want to miss out on a great opportunity because someone couldn’t find an easy way to contact you. You should have a separate contact page linked in your menu (which should be at the top of you blog). Many people use a free form because they are worried about spam. However many people and especially companies prefer a real email address so I highly recommend you offer an email address. Make a separate one for your blog if you want.
  6. About – Do you have an about me page? How am I supposed to know who I am talking to? I MUCH prefer when I can see the face behind the blogger, see if they are a parent or whereabouts they live (doesn’t have to be exact, but at least what country would be nice.) What do they do when they are not blogging?
  7. Labels/Categories – They are called Labels in Blogger and Categories in Wordpress. This is a way to categorize your blog posts, but they should only used if you will have many posts on the topic in the future (or you already do.) If you end up with too many, it makes it too hard for anyone to see if you posted about a subject that interests them. If you do a book review for example, you may label it “book review” or “review” and maybe “fiction” “paranormal” and “romance” for example. You will likely do more reviews and more reviews of those types of books. You shouldn’t add the author’s name and book title to the labels/categories though. You will never review the same book title again and even if you review a few things from the same author, if you include every author you review, your category list will get way too cluttered to find anything. If someone is looking for reviews of a certain author, they can search for that. If you are on wordpress, you can use tags for more specific things like people’s names, place names etc. Tags are different than categories.
  8. Tone It Down – Go easy on the music and animated graphics and widgets. First of all, it’s what you like, but not necessarily what your readers like and although it is YOUR blog, you do want readers and if you have too much, they just won’t stay. Add to that the fact that music and animated items take longer to load and if your page takes more than a minute to load (and if I’m in a rush, more than 30 seconds) I’ll just give up and leave. (I’m not alone in that though.)
  9. Learn More – reading blogs who post blogging tips and reading books about blogging will help you improve. There are all kinds of tutorials to do all sorts of neat little things. For Wordpress help check out Lorelle On Wordpress.
If you are interested in looking more in-depth or you have already got the above things fixed the way you want, it may be helpful to see MomComm’s Blog Critiques. She has critiqued many blogs and just by reading what she says about other blogs, you can get all kinds of ideas for your own blog. She also sells a DIY Critque Workbook for $14. I haven’t seen it but it sounds good.

Mini Challenge

Implement at least two changes to your blog from these ideas. If your happy with your blog design, tell me a short story of when you first started blogging and what your blog looked like then or what mistakes you made. Either way, comment to tell me what you did.

Biannual Blogathon Bash Kick Off Post #blogathon2

blogathonsummerIt’s time! The Biannual Blogathon Bash has officially started. If this is your first time hearing about it, it’s a blogging marathon started by yours truly and this is it’s second running. Do as much blogging as you can this weekend, get caught up on your to do list.  You can still join!

So this is my kick off post. I am working on 5 blogs this weekend. This one, SMS Nonfiction Book Reviews, Biannual Blogathon Bash and 2 secret ones (not ready for public quite yet.) I’ll do a separate kick off post on my book blog.

My Goals:

  1. Get caught up on product reviews for this blog
  2. Change social media buttons
  3. Move memberships to their own page
  4. One of my top sites has moved so I need to re-sign up and fix image
  5. Do a few Ask Callista Posts
  6. Reorganize blogging notebook
  7. Fill out blogging income sheets
  8. Do social spark post
  9. Do intervarsity camp post
  10. Do post about other bloggers I was planning
  11. Brainstorm ideas for upcoming giveaway hop
  12. Check out all the mini challenges and learn something new – do the ones I want
  13. Catch up on emails (you don’t want to know how many there are…)
  14. Schedule a few NON review/giveaway posts (from my ideas list)
  15. Brainstorm more non review/giveaway posts
  16. ?? I’m sure I’ll add more

I’ve cleared my schedule as much as possible this weekend, I am aiming for 30 hours!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

How to Write a Better Tweet on Twitter #blogathon2

Biannual Blogathon BashThis is a mini challenge for the Biannual Blogathon Bash, a twice yearly blogging marathon but anyone is welcome to read and use the information. However if you are signed up for the blogathon or you sign up and participate before the end of the blogathon, completing this mini challenge improves your chances of winning a prize. The blogathon is June 22-25. If you are participating in the blogathon, please do not complete this challenge until the blogathon has started.

Twitter as a Promotional Tool

Twitter is for socializing, networking and promotions. My focus on improving your tweets is for use with promoting your blog posts or blog/company but some of the suggestions may work in general.

When you are tweeting for promotional reason, you are trying to get click throughs. You want to entice people to click on the link and hopefully even follow you and RT (retweet) your tweet.

Parts of a Tweet

There are Four Main Parts of a Promotional Tweet:

  1. Information (the text of the tweet)
  2. People (if it involves someone else you might include their @username or you might put via @yourusername to reference you)
  3. Link (the link you want them to click on – to your post, giveaway, event etc.)
  4. #hashtags (define what your tweet is about and makes it easier to come up in searches)

Parts of a Tweet - hashtag, link, mention, information

We will go over each of those parts more in depth.

Tweet Part #1 – Information

This may seem obvious but I’ve seen many tweets that don’t tell me anything about the content I will find if I click the link. For example:

Check out my newest blog post, it’s awesome! http://linkhere.com

Wordless Wednesday 6/13 http://linkhere.com

Summer Giveaway Hop http://linkhere.com

These tweets wouldn’t tell me enough about it to make me want to click the link. It’s your newest blog post, great, but what is it about? Wordless Wednesday is fun but what sort of photo are you showing? Your post for the giveaway hop is up, but what are you giving away?

What’s even worse is the occasional tweet that is ONLY a link.

Tweeting About Giveaways

With regards to tweets about giveaways, there is one more very important piece of information you should be including. A lot of people don’t include this and guaranteed they are losing click-throughs and therefore giveaway entries because of it. What are they forgetting?

Who is the giveaway open to? Those who live in the US especially often don’t think to mention if the giveaway is US only or US/CAN but those of us elsewhere are constantly clicking a giveaway link (not just through twitter) and getting excited about the giveaway, sometimes even starting to enter, before we see that we aren’t even eligible. As a Canadian I’m at least eligible for a large majority of them. Those in other countries have to be even more careful as they are less likely to be eligible. PLEASE include who the giveaway is open to in your tweet.

Personally, I will NOT retweet your tweet about a giveaway if it doesn’t specify because I don’t tweet about giveaways not open to Canada. I know I’m not the only one.  I also will not click through to see if I can enter, too much time wasted. Others have agreed with me.

Tweet Part #2 – People

When you tweet something, others can see it was by you of course because your username is in front.  If someone retweets that tweet, your @username shows up after the RT, as long as the retweeter doesn’t delete it. If your tweet goes out through Triberr, it adds “via @username” to the end of the tweet to give you credit. It’s important to have your @username in there so that if someone enjoys your tweet, they can easily check out your profile and follow you.

If I am tweeting something I want to be retweeted, especially if I plan to ask for retweets in a blogger group or something, I include my @username in the main part of the tweet so it shows up how I want it’s more obvious. That’s why it says via @blogathon2 in the example tweet above.

If you are creating a tweet to be used as an entry into a giveaway, I recommend adding your username as it won’t automatically be included when they tweet from rafflecopter or I believe the other giveaway widgets either. Plus the more people who tweet or retweet with a mention of your @username, the better it is for your Klout score.

Think about who else you may want to mention in your tweet. If you are tweeting about a post you did about a product or company, you may want to include the company’s twitter handle in your tweet. They will be alerted of the mention (drawing attention to your post which they may retweet).

Tweet Part #3 – Link

The link is probably the most important because without it, there is nothing to click on. However like I stated in #1, just a link is not enough to encourage a click through.

First of all if you are not already, you should be using a URL shortener to make the URL shorter so you can fit more in. I prefer bit.ly as I can track clicks on and I have a little widget that I can click in my browser that pulls up a small box on the side where I can see the shortened url or even tweet directly from it. However if when my twitter pulls a post from my Facebook page on to twitter, it ends up with fb.me and often you see t.co on twitter.

Often times though a link is shortened when you tweet it, it shows up full on twitter (like when you tweet through rafflecopter.)

Since the url is usually a short one that reveals nothing about the link and where it goes, it’s even MORE important to heed my advice in #1 about descriptive text. People are less likely to click on a shortened link without knowing what it is as it could lead to ANYTHING.

Tweet Part #4 – Hashtag

What is a hashtag? According to Twitter:

Definition: The # symbol, called a hashtag, is used to mark keywords or topics in a Tweet. It was created organically by Twitter users as a way to categorize messages. – source

So you would use a hashtag to basically state that your tweet is a part of a certain topic or category and often, part of an event (like using the #blogathon2 hashtag for posts about the blogathon.)

Anyone can make up a hashtag or you can use one you’ve seen used elsewhere on twitter as long as your tweet has to do with that hashtag. Hashtags.org is a separate website that tracks hashtags. By searching for the #blogathon2 hashtag, you can see the last few tweets using the hashtag but the chart isn’t currently showing. There is also hashtracking which shows only the last 24 hours.

If someone clicks on your hashtags in your tweet, they will be shown any other tweets with that same hashtag.

Hashtags for Bloggers

Giveaways: #win #giveaway #contest #canwin (open to canada)
Bloggers: #bloggers #blogging #socialmedia
Review Bloggers: #review
Book Bloggers: #teenlit #YA #paranormal #indie #author #bookreview #amreading #womenslit #nonfiction #bestsellers #bookblog
Coupon/Deal Bloggers: #savingmoney #coupons #deals #free #freesamples #printablecoupons #freebie
Mom Bloggers: #momblogger #momblog #mommyblogger
Homeschool Bloggers: #homeschool bloggers @hsblogger
Food/Recipe: #easyrecipes #foodie #recipes #cooking #food
Craft: #craft #etsy #handmade #crochet #DIY #art

There are tons more and I could never cover all the types of blogs so I won’t try. Just think of a common term to what you are tweeting about and either just include it or search hashtags.org or twitter.com to see if others are using it.

However don’t over due it. No more than three hashtags per tweet please, one or two is best.

Conclusion

I hope that I’ve helped you create a better tweet. Keep your audience in mind when you are stuck. Use keywords in your text and if you are running out of characters, shorten or eliminate what you are saying. Now is not the time for perfect grammar. Two more last minute tips:

  1. Keep it Short – Twitter only allows 140 characters. If you take up all of them, there is no room for anyone to retweet you or comment on your tweet while keeping some of it there. Shorter tweets are also often read more.
  2. Put the link in the middle of the tweet if possible. Widgets and plugins often do what they want but if you are crafting the tweet yourself, put the url in the middle. People are impatient, they may only read a little of your tweet, so you don’t want them to stop reading before they get to the link.

Mini Challenge

If you are participating in the blogathon (or if you just want to), your challenge is to tweet about a blog post, giveaway or event you have on your blog using what you have learned here. Try to include at least one hashtag, shorten your link, add who it’s open to if it’s a giveaway, and keep it short.  The link should be in the middle. Make sure your text describes the link. When you are done, tweet it out. Then grab the direct link to your tweet and leave it in the comments so I can check it out (and possibly retweet it!)

Not sure how to find the direct link to a tweet?

After you tweet, it will say something like 2 seconds ago or 10 minutes ago, depending on how long it’s been since you tweeted. Right click on that and save link as or copy link location (depending on browser) Or click the link and then copy it from your address bar.

The direct link should be in this format:
https://twitter.com/username/status/214492937931862016

Leave Any Questions in the Comments

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Biannual Blogathon Bash Finale - My Wrap-Up Post

Biannual Blogathon Bash

I was going to stay up for a few more hours but I'm sleep deprived so I'll have to wrap it up. I have over 10 tabs open to do more tomorrow. Just because the blogathon is over, doesn't mean blogging is!

So let's review my goals.

I wanted to spend 24 hours on blogging. How much did I do? I got about 20 hours. I didn't make my goal but I got close. Unfortunately more than half of that was working on blogathon things. I didn't get much done on my other blogs.

My To-Do List:

Organize Email (I have over 1600 emails to sort through.) There are still more to go through but I made a big dent!)
Mass Write Blog Posts (especially reviews but some others ones too.) I did 10 posts total but 8 were for the blogathon...
Clean up my Pinterest Account Nope
Clean up my sidebars Nope
Change my social media icons so they all match Nope
Do my homework from the Blogelina class I'm taking. Nope
Finish planning and open sign ups for my next cash giveaways Yes! Well it's ready and signups are open in one week.
Add some support threads to my Callista's Ramblings Events FB group. Decided to do tomorrow.
Add a Canadian Blog Blogroll Nope. Was going to do that next but I'm too tired.
Who Knows What Else! I did some stuff not on the list though!

#Bloggers in #Canada - Your Questions Answered About Claiming Blog Income on Your Taxes

(c) Dreamstime.com
A tax professional at H&R Block did a guest post at the Biannual Blogathon Bash blog explaining why you need to claim your blog income and how to go about it. Very informative.

When you are done reading that, check out the great post at Maple Leaf Mommy about how to track your blog income and expenses so you are ready for tax time.

Friday, March 09, 2012

Biannual Blogathon Bash Mini Challenge - Organizing Your Email

Biannual Blogathon Bash This is a mini challenge for the Biannual Blogathon Bash. Anyone is welcome to benefit from it but to be eligible to win prizes, you must be signed up as a participant and have done your kick off post.

Who has more than 100 emails in their email program? More than 500? More than 1000? My hand is up.

I get so many between email subscriptions, newsletters, notifications, messages from friends, pitches from companies and of course spam. I just can't keep up! It gets overwhelming.

Here are some tips for email organization:
  1.  Don't let everything come in to your inbox. Create folders and add message rules to direct incoming emails into those folders. I have one for blog subscriptions, one for twitter notifications, one for posts from a certain online group and more. I also have folders that I manually move certain emails too after I've read them but need to keep them. I have a save folder for bill notifications and sign up emails. I have a Waiting for Action folder for pitches I've received and replied to but am waiting a response and for contacts that are waiting for me to email them their review or sponsored post link.
  2. Speaking of notifications, do you really need them? If you check facebook everyday anyways (or more than once a day) then you don't need email notifications. Go into your facebook setting and get rid of them. Do you really want to be notified when someone follows you on twitter? If not, change your settings. 
  3. Look at the newsletters you receive. Do you actually read and use them? Or have you been deleting them everytime they come in because they just aren't interesting you? We often sign up for things to get a reward or because they sound good at the time but then later decide they aren't what we need. Why we just keep deleting them instead of unsubscribing I don't know. But take the time now to do that. Pair down the subscriptions and newsletters that you don't really love.
  4. Set up some templates to save you time. Most email programs have a spot where you can create custom signatures to put at the end of your post with the click of a button. But who says they have to be signatures or always at the end? Is there something you often have to email? Make it a signature file and whenever you need it, you can add it with one touch. I have one that introduces my name and blog and what I blog about that I add at the beginning of a pitch. I have another that says politely that I'm not interested in that pitch but thank you. I have a signature that also includes my address so when I'm asked for it AGAIN I don't have to type it each time. Be creative. This saves time.
Challenge

Your challenge is to eliminate at least 50 emails you no longer need from your email client (if by some chance your email isn't overflowing like mine and you don't have 50 that need to go, do as many as you can.) Also check if you need to change your notifications from a website or unsubscribe from some newsletters. If you want to, create a signature for another reason.  Tell me in the comments how you did.

Related Posts:

 - How to Clean Up and Inbox (from ehow.com)
 - Extreme Makeover: The Email Inbox Edition (from blogs.hbr.org)
 - Empty Your Inbox: 4 Ways to Take Control of Your Email (from microsoft.com)

Biannual Blogathon Bash Mini Challenge - Adding Photos To Your Posts

Biannual Blogathon Bash The more readable and attractive you make your blog, the better the chance that someone will bother reading it. So how can you make it more attractive? Add photos!


Here are some blog posts of mine that I added photos to
http://callistasramblings.blogspot.com/2011/11/warning-reading-this-blog-could-be.html (see how this photo grabs your attention and makes you interested in what the post is about)
http://callistasramblings.blogspot.com/2012/02/5-ideas-for-fun-and-memorable-march.html
http://callistasramblings.blogspot.com/2011/03/guest-post-on-road-to-parenting.html

The problem is, you can't just pick any photo you find through an image search and put it on your blog because of a big thing called Copyright.
Copyright laws protect the original creator of a work, such as written text, an image, a video, or an audio clip, from having that work stolen or misused. - source
Copyright can be complicated but there are some basic things you should know.
Files from the Internet (contrary to what so many people seem to think) are not automatically fair game or public domain. There are public domain photo sources out there but research is about the only way to know for sure. Turning photographs and other images into line drawings doesn't necessarily negate the copyright. And free images frequently applies only to non-commercial use. - source

There are different kinds of photos:

Public Domain - no credit needed. Usually it's because the copyright has expired. Could also be if someone says their work is in the public domain. Unfortunately you have to be careful as someone else could show a bunch of photos that ARE copyrighted and say they are public domain and you wouldn't know if that's right.

Fair Use - Let me quote for this one:
 If you're reusing someone else's material on your blog for the purpose of providing criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching or research, then you may not have to seek permission - source
How much is considered Fair Use is debatable though. This category is for things like adding book covers and a picture of a product in your review (because you are commenting on it.) However don't go adding all photos from the company's website. I would stick to ones that are displayed in a store or better yet, if you were provided the item for review, ask for some photos to use.  

Official Creative Commons logo. 32px|alt=W3C|l...Image via Wikipedia
Creative Commons - This means that the photos are being allowed to be used by others as long as you follow their rules. This may mean a link back, that they can't be altered, or that they can't be used for profit. (That means if you monetize your blog, you can't use those ones.)  This is the category that you will most likely get your photos from. Just read the rules and make sure you are doing it right.

Sites to Find Photos:
RGB Stock Photos
Kozzi
Dreamstime
Morguefile
Flickr Creative Commons
Creative Commons Search (searches more than one site)
Every Stock Photo
PD Photo (Public Domain)
Open Photo
Every Stock Photo
PicFindr

Your Own Photos - You can of course take your own photos which I suggest if you have a good enough camera. You may want to watermark them with your site name so if they get passed around, it is still credited to you.

Your Challenge

I want you to find and add a photo to one of your old posts. I know some of you don't have all that many posts yet but find one without a good photo, take note of it's subject and pick a site to search. You may need to be creative to find the right one. If your post is about goals, you could try searching for "goals" or you could think about how a sports goal would be a funny play on words and search "soccer goal" or "goalie" or maybe a mountain to show that your goal will get you over the mountain "mountain" etc....

So do that and comment with the link to your post below.

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Biannual Blogathon Bash Kick Off!

Biannual Blogathon Bash It's time!

The Biannual Blogathon Bash has started! It runs 8am EST March 9 to 8am EST March 12 - 72 hours to get as much blogging done as you can. It's not too late to sign up, see here. (Hint: There are Prizes)

To kick off, here are my plans for the weekend.

GOAL: At LEAST 24 hours of blogging TOTAL (Not Consecutive) 

I'd aim for more but I have kids. The two oldest are at school today and then they go to Grandma's house for the night. My niece is coming over to occupy the baby tonight and tomorrow. Then I'm taking a break from the blogathon because I already had a games night scheduled (although I will be reviewing some games I got then!) and then I'll be back on Sunday but I'll have all three kids so don't know how much will get done.

My To-Do List:
  • Organize Email (I have over 1600 emails to sort through.)
  • Mass Write Blog Posts (especially reviews but some others ones too.)
  • Clean up my Pinterest Account
  • Clean up my sidebars
  • Change my social media icons so they all match
  • Do my homework from the Blogelina class I'm taking.
  • Finish planning and open sign ups for my next cash giveaways
  • Add some support threads to my Callista's Ramblings Events FB group.
  • Add a Canadian Blog Blogroll
  • Who Knows What Else!
I'd love it if you'd cheer me on!
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