review plugin for wordpress
Apr 08

I got some new stuff to talk about, but they were not big enough to take a post by themselves. So here is a mashup:

Feedburner has recently added a “post to twitter” feature. It is under your feed’s Publisize, Socialize.

Not a groundbreaking feature really, but what I love about it is that there is an option to pull the post’s tags and generate hashtags. Yeah, that is one nifty little feature that makes your tweets pop up in twittersearch. That of course, if you use real tags, and not the tags I use on this blog that suck…

Aweber has recently added a new form generator, with some really cool options. Time to update those crappy forms and get  web2.0

I know all you IM gurus have put the dollar sign form. Don’t. Please don’t. It is a cliche before it even got posted.

Since we are talking about forms, I am going to repeat an opinion that I wrote about a long time ago:

Your contact form only needs name, email and comment.

If you ask for more, fuck you. A few days ago I tried to contact an affiliate company I work with, and their only means was through a contact form. And that contact form required (REQUIRED) my affiliate ID and my contact details, WHILE I WAS STILL LOGGED IN THEIR SYSTEM. For fucks sake, get a programmer will ya? Needless to say, I closed the page and they never got my feedback.

Make it easy for people to reach you. Their time is precious.

One other thing I am happy with, is the new Wordpress 3. It is still in beta, so no live application of it yet, but it rocks. It simply rocks.

  • It is finally a usable CMS. You can finally manage your menu easily, not jerk around with page orders and parents and css tricks.
  • They finally removed that stupid random admin password during installation. I remember that this was the issue with automatic mass wordpress installations, maybe now it will become a breeze.
  • There is a new theme. Who gives a shit.
  • You can change headers and background pics for that new theme. Could be useful for seasonal stuff, or sponsored backgrounds?
  • And there is a custom post feature, that enables you to get posting the way you want to. Nice one.
  • They also say that Wordpress 3 is integrated with MU, and that from now on they will be developed in parallel. No more plugin issues? I doubt it, but we will see.

After all, code is poetry.

Popularity: 2% [?]

written by Glowleaf \\ tags: , , ,

Sep 23

Using social media is a one-way street in today’s internet. What used to be a passing fad 2 years ago is now a serious marketing platform.

It depends on your site/product/service of course, but social media can push serious traffic towards you.

Facebook.

By hitting the 300 million milestone, Facebook is now a huge platform. Have you ever dreamt as a marketer “what if I could reach out a whole country? That would be awesome.”

Well, now you can. Facebook has the biggest userbase in the world. What used to be a fad, is now a must. The smart thing that facebook did was the notifications. A friend of yours signs up on Facebook? You get notified, because it parsed his email list. Someone added you as a friend? You get emailed. Someone tagged you on a photograph? The same. Someone replied on that comment on a photograph? Spam, spam spam. And the funny thing is, that it is never treated as spam. Facebook just lets you know that other people are doing stuff on your account. And since those people are your friends, you never get offended if they keep spamming you with sheep and mafia guns. Facebook is just the messenger.

Twitter.

Twitter must be the biggest fad of them all. Many have fought it and then fell in love with it. Even I did. In fact, it is so great, that its traffic must be the most valuable of them all. Twitter traffic comments on your posts, subscribes on your RSS and email list, blogs about you, retweets your tweets etc. You might not be able to directly sell something on twitter, but you are bound to get some exposure. And if your promo is worth it, that exposure will convert indirectly.

I think that twitter nailed it with the 140 word limit. People get spammed all day, every day, around the world. Ads, radio, phone calls, SMS, emails, billboards, leaflets, a whole blizzard of little spammy messages are fighting each other for your attention. And researches show that the average attention span of a person has been reduced significantly the last few years. Twitter fits that lifestyle perfectly. The way I see it, it is even better than RSS feeds. I used to go through my subscribed RSS blogs every few days, and had to read to whole posts etc. Now, I just have a twitter account, follow those people who interest me, and receive manageable chunks of info from them every day. It is a mashup of little shouts, and they stay non-intrusive because I chose to receive them!

Myspace.

Don’t neglect Myspace. Yea, its old. Yea, it sucks. But there are a lot of people on it. And the best part is, a lot of stupid people. People to whom you can sell stuff.

Ok then, how can we leverage these 3 social sites easily and effectively?

There is a little piece of software that does all that. It is called tweetdeck, and it rocks. It started out as a more useful GUI for multiple twitter accounts, but the newest version bridges Myspace and Facebook as well. I believe it is a marketer’s wet dream.

Once you set it up, you can manage each of your site’s social exposure on 3 social networks from the same interface. Lets say you have your personal blog, so you make accounts for it at Myspace, Facebook and twitter. You pass everything into tweetdeck, and voila, you can post and manage them from one location. Want to promote your service? 3 more accounts, set them up in Tweetdeck, and you can go back and forth between them all day inside tweetdeck.

Of course, setting up the accounts is an important step. Different social sites need different approaches to succeed in getting lots of victi… cough, sorry, friends.

Honestly, for Myspace I have no idea what to do to make an account popular. Google it, someone will know.

For facebook, I found this useful article on Mashable amongst the enormous pile of crap on that domain.

For twitter, a lot has been said, but it is all bloated bullshit. What you need to know is this: link periodically to interesting stuff in your niche. That is all, honestly. Either do it manually or automate it. An easy way to do this is to fire up tweetdeck (I told you it rocks!) and open a search tab. As a keyword put something in your niche, for example #php or #wordpress or #lol. Spend exactly 40 seconds every day, check that tab on tweetdeck, and retweet something that looks even remotely interesting, you don’t even have to click the bit.ly :)

Of course it is not as easy as it sounds. Creating a following through social media takes time, and there is no secret recipe for it. What is certain is that it does help your site, and it does help get exposure.

Now, what should you promote? Not everything works when you promote to the social crowd. Think about building/promoting:

  • Viral content
  • Video
  • Interaction/Flash promo
  • Polls
  • Contests
  • Interesting articles

How can you twist the above into sales? Well, that is for you to find out! It is different for every product, but there is always an angle of approach you can take to twist linkbait/socialbait into buying.  Use your imagination, and keep an eye open for what other marketers are doing on the same platforms.

Signup on my mailing list if you want juicier stuff than this.

Popularity: 3% [?]

written by Glowleaf \\ tags: , , , ,

Sep 18

I found this on my Google alert:

@nickwilsdon glowleaf is at it too   
@nickwilsdon I take it this is some spin-off of auto-pligg?   
@patrickaltoft Good idea, and I bet Akismet would catch a lot of the rubbish that gets submitted.   
Sphinn’s upcoming page is a mess – looks like a couple of people have figured out how to auto-submit.  
 

I submitted 4 more of my old articles on Sphinn, and their overenthusiastic staff decided to delete them all, because I was flooding the Upcoming page.

I agree, it might look spammy, but that was not my intention. I just had a few minutes spare time, and decided to submit some of my best posts. I am used to stumble, where the upcoming queue is irrelevant, and digg, where the queue shifts in seconds. Sphinn is a more tight, small community, and submissions are slow.

So, sorry. I really am.

But, just for your information, sphinn uses an engine that does not parse the deleted links from the submitted urls database. So the urls are effectively banned. So, don’t submit too much stuff, and also, don’t let your site go inactive for a few hours, because they remove the submission too! This makes your url “banned” as well.

To their defense, the same Mod emailed me that they are aware of the problem, and its on their to-do list. So, Sphinn keeps getting better, and I like it.

And I never submit any crappy pages, its always the articles, and most of them are close to 2000 words.

But getting accused of autosubmitting and spamming Sphinn? Get a life guys.

Or at least say it on something that does not get indexed for the public.

And no, don’t submit this to Sphinn. I forbid you.

Let me rephrase all that: Screw Sphinn.

Popularity: 10% [?]

written by Glowleaf \\ tags: , ,