«Your first
year of blogging is about learning, but you have to remember to put in that practice if you want to be successful.»
Only the top 200 bloggers in the world were invited (and to be selected my first
year of blogging is a major accomplishment) because there are over 12,000 bloggers affiliated with Reward Style.
If you ask me what the number one thing I learned from my first half
year of blogging is, I would say it is you have to be yourself.
My overall goal for
this year of blogging is to make the blog a better resource for readers.
I'm not doing too well with the first week into my second
year of blogging am I?
4
years of blogging is quite an accomplishment.
Oh gosh yes, my blogging voice from my first two
years of blogging was awful too.
My first
year of blogging was ALL over the place.
5
years of blogging is a serious number.
2
years of blogging is a big accomplishment that means you should celebrate in a big way
Not exact matches
Matt Horwitz, founder
of tutorial site LLC University, has
been blogging about LLC formation for over six
years.
#sbdibCorey Freeman & amp; lt; / div & amp; gt; & amp; lt; div & amp; gt; @smbizdoitbetter Not a resolution but a guarantee: Increase sales for @slawsa by no less than 250 % over 2012 #sbdib #noexcusesJulie Busha & amp; lt; / div & amp; gt; & amp; lt; div & amp; gt; My Small Business New
Year's Resolution
is to create a social media marketing and
blogging schedule AND stick to it!Andrea Graves - Boring & amp; lt; / div & amp; gt; & amp; lt; div & amp; gt; & amp; amp; quot; My new
Year's Resolution & amp; amp; quot; I have designed a new line
of greeting cards for children and adults.
In addition to regularly
blogging on the subject
of raising funding for his own blog mpd.me and publications like Inc.com and Business Insider, Davis has written a series
of soon - to -
be released self - published books on navigating the startup financing maze: «Fundraising Rules,» to
be released this fall and «Breaking the Rules,» which
is expected out sometime next
year.
Aaron Gowell, CEO
of SilverRail Technology, which
is helping to build an online travel platform for high - speed trains in Europe, decided to start
blogging in July
of this
year.
Billion - dollar startups
are sprouting like dandelions in Silicon Valley these days, but that certainly wasn't the case 10
years ago this week, when Arianna Huffington launched a
blogging site with the help
of a few celebrity friends.
But one thing that isn't part
of the deal
is Gawker.com — the website that helped to launch an alternative
blogging empire almost 14
years ago.
She
is a 25 -
year veteran
of the marketing field and has authored 10 books about marketing, branding, and social media, including the highly popular 30 - Minute Social Media Marketing, Content Marketing for Dummies,
Blogging All - in - One for Dummies and Kick - ass Copywriting in 10 Easy Steps.
Guest
blogging services
are cropping up everywhere (including here, at AudienceBloom) as the industry begins to realize that guest
blogging, as a link building tactic,
is one
of the few safe havens left after Penguin demolished many
of the lower - cost, higher quantity tactics that SEOs came to rely upon over the course
of the past several
years.
I had the pleasure
of interviewing her last
year and I
am still learning from her ingenious
blogging methods.
On Tuesday night, Peterborough City Council approved a plan for a for - profit corporation to own and operate a new student residence at Trent University. I
'm concerned that this may signal a new trend at Canadian universities; about a
year ago, I
blogged about a similar plan at the University
of Toronto.
The
blogging has
been tremendous so far, however the P2P weakness really hurt me in terms
of where I want to
be for the
year - to - date passive income.
Another interesting stat from this 50 page report published by Social Media Examiner
is that only 11 %
of B2B marketers and 6 %
of B2C marketers find
blogging most important while 68 % say they plan on increasing their use
of blogging in the coming
year.
I really
am honored that, although I've only
been blogging since June
of this
year, I have
been nominated in the Link Building category (thanks for nominating me, Justilien;)-RRB-.
Sadly the blogger that
was to host this week's edition
of the «Carnival
of MoneyPros» stopped
blogging late last
year.
over the last two
years my two main sources
of income through
blogging have
been affiliate referral commissions and selling my own products and services.
This
is how I received a lot
of traffic in the early
years of my
blogging.
So in addition to the Top 10
of the
year, I wanted to share a couple more posts — these
are the posts that I actually liked or feel represent my
year of writing, even if no one else liked them or tweeted about them, even if they
are an out -
of - fashion style
of blogging like story - telling or moment - capturing.
Of course there are other reasons for my sporadic blogging this year: a surprise new baby coming which completely disoriented us, a new book to finish writing (and I will share all about that in January), travelling and speaking all over North America, stewarding the message of Jesus Feminist throughout her first year of life, creating the Jesus Feminist collection with Imagine Goods, a trip to Haiti, new opportunities as a writer, three tinies at home with their own lives and drama and growth and change, remodelling parts of our home, marriage, church, friends, life, work, laundry (oh, can we talk laundry?
Of course there
are other reasons for my sporadic
blogging this
year: a surprise new baby coming which completely disoriented us, a new book to finish writing (and I will share all about that in January), travelling and speaking all over North America, stewarding the message
of Jesus Feminist throughout her first year of life, creating the Jesus Feminist collection with Imagine Goods, a trip to Haiti, new opportunities as a writer, three tinies at home with their own lives and drama and growth and change, remodelling parts of our home, marriage, church, friends, life, work, laundry (oh, can we talk laundry?
of Jesus Feminist throughout her first
year of life, creating the Jesus Feminist collection with Imagine Goods, a trip to Haiti, new opportunities as a writer, three tinies at home with their own lives and drama and growth and change, remodelling parts of our home, marriage, church, friends, life, work, laundry (oh, can we talk laundry?
of life, creating the Jesus Feminist collection with Imagine Goods, a trip to Haiti, new opportunities as a writer, three tinies at home with their own lives and drama and growth and change, remodelling parts
of our home, marriage, church, friends, life, work, laundry (oh, can we talk laundry?
of our home, marriage, church, friends, life, work, laundry (oh, can we talk laundry?!)
I know that
blogging as a medium has shifted and changed A LOT over the
years and most
of the bloggers I started out alongside
of have had to step away or shut down for diverse reasons but I
'm hanging on still.
The last
year's worth
of controversy
are simultaneously a commendation and condemnation
of the state
of «Christian» journalism and associated punditry, but the alternative
is not necessarily
blogging or «just»
blogging, but a reappraisal
of our ethics and interests in the public sphere
This
was a full
year for our family: Haiti, book writing, book deals, finishing seminary, working, three small tinies, church, family, friends, life, change, home making,
blogging, working, all
of it.
Anyway,
years later we've become dear friends and so
of course I
was so sad when she quit
blogging earlier this
year.
When I look back on nearly four
years of blogging, the posts that mattered the most to me
are the ones that
were collaborative, the ones we created together.
Twenty
years from now, what will researchers
be saying about the long - term effects
of blogging and
of reading blogs?
As some have commented here and elsewhere, this
is probably more
of a «sabbatical» during which I will refocus and rejuvenate In all my
years of blogging, I have never taken a Sabbatical, and one
is long overdue.
This
year's event
was held last month in Toronto and has,
of course,
been blogged here at PoMoCon.
I've
been blogging for a few
years now and the creativity
of some people to come up with their emoticons...
The lectionary
is rich this time
of year, and as I get back to
blogging through the Scripture readings each week, our focus will
be on paying attention to the witness
of the prophets, connecting them to the Christmas story and to our present longing for God's will to
be done on earth as it
is in heaven.
Back when I had my first three, I worked full time, sure, but it
was local and I had a full
year of mat leave, I
blogged during naptime for the fun
of it.
Since I have qualified to make it on a few lists
of blogs, most recently into the top 55 pastor bloggers, and since I
am a pastor who has
been blogging at nakedpastor for a few
years, I figure this allows me to give some suggestions to pastor bloggers.
I
am taking the rest
of the
year off from
blogging to spend time with my family.
In my relentless pursuit
of scaring off as many readers as possible this
year, I
'm blogging today about contraception.
Despite my preoccupation with living biblically, it
's been a successful
year of blogging, thanks to you.
About midway through last
year, it suddenly dawned on me that it
's not my job to generated seven days
of content for readers all on my own, but that, in addition to posting my own thoughts, I can use my
blogging platform to feature news stories, links, interviews, discussions, guest posts, and videos that would
be of interest to you!
As I look over this past
year of blogging, I would say that these
are some
of the best things that happened:
There
are «free» or «low cost» ways
of blogging (for less than $ 100 per
year).
Even though you explained the costs
of running the blog and podcast, maybe some people think that
blogging is very inexpensive, like the people I hear say that it costs only $ 15 or $ 20 a
year to have blog.
While I've already
blogged a recipe for Nankhatai last
year, this one
is all the more festive due to the addition
of saffron.
I have found that I feel less that way in the last few
years, since I have
been blogging, since I know that the recipe (and the image
of the finished product) lives on, either on the blog or in a cookbook.
I
am as belated as anyone could expect (1/24
of the
year is already gone)
of my sporadic
blogging schedule.