Archive for the ‘Blogging’ Category

Blog Makeover

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

Happy New Year to you all! Hope you all had a fun time.

As always at the start of a new year, it is a time for reflection, taking stock and starting afresh with new ideas. I am hoping that 2008 will bring new exciting challenges and adventures for the Deckchair team. One of the main things on our ‘TO DO List’ is to redesign our blog. It is rather uninspiring to look at and it is a bit shameful that it has taken us 6 months to get round to thinking about it.

There are lots of things I think we should include aside from the obvious much needed asthetic redesign. And of course it goes without saying that I would be most grateful for any advice or suggestions from any of you:

  1. Add in the Dofollow plugin as Randa Clay mentions in her I follow blog. It will give more incentive to visitors to leave comments as the search engines will recognise the link.
  2. Make it more obvious which of the Deckchair team is writing each post by adding an author picture at the top of the post. (might have to do a bit of arm twisting on that one, designers are so shy!)
  3. Add a community panel (if that is what it is called?) so that recent visitors and commentors can be seen and can see each other. As on Paul Enderson’s blog Reflections.
  4. Add a counter that clocks the number of times each blog post is viewed. This is mainly for my benefit as I don’t get many comments at the moment and it will make me feel better if I see that lots of people have at least looked at it. :)
  5. Add a ‘popular articles’ list down the side of the blog to make it easier for people to get to the good stuff.
  6. Add the similar posts plugin as suggested in David Airey’s blog Top 5 essential wordpress plugins.
  7. Make it easier to subscribe to the blog.
  8. Some of these plugins look interesting on Elliot Swan’s wordpress plugins worth having blog. But still working my way through understanding what most of them are!
  9. Search function of some sort to help people find what they are looking for.

I am sure that this list will grow and change as we start the makeover process so watch this space! Again, if you have any useful tips or suggestions we would be most grateful :)

Toni

Bloggers block? - some top tips shared

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

 brick wall

Every now and then all bloggers experience what is known as ‘bloggers block’. When it comes creeping in, it can be a terrifying affliction; the pressure of making that next post as original and interesting as the last, grows. As the blogger tosses and turns at night, unable to sleep he feels his once eager readers slipping from his grasp… OK, maybe it’s not that bad but every now and then we all struggle for inspiration so I thought I would (humbly) write a few top tips to help design bloggers or in fact any blogger keep the creativity flowing.

1. Obviously there is always inspiration out there in your fellow bloggers’ work. Reading other blogs regularly will often spark a good idea for your own blog. You can add a new perspective to their point or spot a tangent that they haven’t mentioned. It is good to be inspired by someone else’s work; you can credit them, quote them and link to them to show your appreciation. (Of course it isn’t good to just blatantly steal someone else’s copy).

2. Use a tool like wordtracker to do some in depth keyword research; find some little niche phrases to blog about, you may be surprised at what you find.

3. Have a think about recent web or graphic design projects you have been working on. Have you come across a technical issue that you could write about? Have you learned a new way of doing something or achieving a new effect in a design program that you use? These are going to be particularly interesting to other designers.

4. Have you just completed a design project? Perhaps a post about what you have achieved for the client might be interesting to potential clients. This is definitely one that you shouldn’t do too often though as a blog that constantly blows its own trumpet all the time is rather dull.

5. Have a jolly good rant…go on; don’t hold back, you know it will make you feel better! As long as the rant has an objective and bears some relation to your topic it can work really well. Some of the best blogs I have read have been pure rant. Again, this is not something you want to do all the time you need to have some positive stuff in there too.

6. Put your self in your reader’s shoes for a moment and think about what questions they might need answering. What information have you got that might be really useful to them? Having an objective like this can help the writing process too.

7. Take the time to read books and magazines on your industry; these are going to be filled with stimulating information on your niche topics that will give you some ideas to bounce around.

8. Try to write from a different perspective sometimes, perhaps looking at the industry in a broader sense rather than focusing on details for example. Also try looking at issues that concern the industries that are in some way connected to yours.

9. Don’t put too much pressure on yourself to write a massive long essay every time. Short blogs can be just as effective and actually easier to read, particularly as web readers have a much more limited attention span.

10. Keep a little list somewhere of ideas, issues and facts that you can keep coming back to for inspiration. Often I will see a particular thing on my list a few times before I actually attempt to write about it and usually each time I see it I have a new angle on it or a new idea of a good way to write it.

11. If the bloggers block has a real tight hold on you, it is always an option to offer a guest blog spot to another blogger. This will give you a bit of breathing space to recoup your writing energy. This brings me neatly on to my next tip:

12. Take some time out away from your computer, go for a walk or pause to chat to someone about something unrelated. This is a good way to freshen your mind. You never know you might be able to start a blog with “A funny thing happened to me on the way to the shop…”

13. A good way to post regularly is to cover a topic or issue over several blog posts or in several parts. This not only gives you a bit more time to write but also gives the readers an incentive to come back.

14. Find something that you don’t know the answer to and blog about that, asking your readers for their opinion at the end of the post. This not only humanises you but gives people the opportunity to help you. Got to be a good thing – we all need help sometimes!

So, if like me you sometimes find yourself staring hopelessly at your computer desperately waiting for something to happen; try some of the above.
Hope this is helpful…if you have any bloggers block tips to share it would be great to here from you. :)

Toni

Other related useful articles:
20 types of blog posts - battling bloggers block
blogger block poem
Getting past bloggers block

Do you worship Wordpress?

Friday, November 23rd, 2007

Blogging has become a very popular way to communicate with your audience and to keep content fresh on a website. Wordpress would be many people’s choice of platform for a blog, as it is well designed and certainly very flexible. It has been said that blog websites can ‘all look the same’, but it is very easy to make them look different with the hundreds of wordpress themes available and a bit of personalisation. In fact a lot of people now have turned their website into their blog and combined the two. We are in the process of doing this with our site and hope to gain many benefits.

Although Wordpress was launched originally as a blogging tool, many people are now using it to build non blog websites. Because of its lean code, expandability through a multitude of available plugins and great backend administration area, it has become a versatile platform from which to build a fully content managed site. Unlike other CMS systems which are bloated and maybe too full featured (Joomla is good, but guilty of this), the simple nature of Wordpress allows designers to expand from an uncluttered base and go as far as you want with features and design.

Here is a great example of a Wordpress site: David Airey.

Do you use wordpress? What limitations have you found with using it to build non blog websites? Are there other systems you prefer to use? It would be great to hear others thoughts on this.

Ollie


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