Money Making Blogs Bring in Residual Income

Oct 24

Money Making Blogs Bring in Residual Income

blog sandra dewi

sandra-dewiEverybody has a blog, and everybody is creating income by blogging. The question is how are they doing it? What is so extraordinary about money making blogs that you can create income by posting on it? The first thing that you want to do is determine a niche to blog about. Find out what is selling on line and something that you are passionate about. You must believe in the product are service that you are offering are it will be hard to stay focused on your business.

Now that you acknowledge what your web log will be all about, you’re prepared to get down to business. First off you want to determine how frequently you will update your web log. You should add fresh content to your blogs daily. Search engines like Google love fresh content. Adding content daily will get you higher ranking. It is critical that what you post to your web log is not only relevant information but what your readers will find useful.

The common tools for blogging are WordPress.com and blogs.com. Both tools are user friendly. Both offer free templates that are easy to use. It’s not hard to modify the encrypt to alter the look. It could be a little overwhelming for someone who never learned much about the internet or computers before, but most blog sites have easy to follow teachings and guides. I believe that no matter how demanding setting up a web log could be for an individual, it’s genuinely worth it.

After setting up your money making blogs start posting your articles. Adding videos to your blogs helps greatly to bring in new prospects. Using pinging tools will allow web log directories to keep updated with your blog if you have added a fresh post to your web log. You’ll be able to sign up at pingler.com which will allow you to have your blog pinged with a lot of different services all at once. This will bring traffic to your blog. Do this Daily but not less than 24 hours.

Wishing You Great Success!

Source : Ray Bordelon

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Website Basics – Content Management Systems

Feb 04

Websites provide information. Whether you sell products or services, or your site is educational or commercial in nature, content is king. Few websites are truly static and even fewer should be. Good design and regularly updated content are the key to keeping your website relevant, fresh, and valuable to users – not to mention the search engines. Paying a web designer whenever you need to upload new photos or text gets expensive. For frequent updates, a Content Management System (CMS) makes it easy to manage updates yourself, even on complex dynamic sites.

Simply put, content is all the “stuff” on your website: text, photographs, charts, graphics, audio/visual elements, downloadable forms or PDF documents, interactive pages and applications that allow users to do or affect something. In short, content is anything that appears on the site, and all the elements that comprise it. Content management is how you manipulate that “stuff”: text revisions, calendar and event updates, new photographs, forms, even new pages or tabs on the site. A CMS is a computer program or software that allows you to add, delete, or manipulate the content, generally without any special knowledge of code, programming or web design magic.

When developing a website, your designer will want to know in advance what content the site will include. This is important, because content influences both the design – how the site is composed visually – and the structure of the code to ensure that everything works smoothly. Ultimately, everything on the “front end” of a given website (the part the user sees) is the result of programming code on the “back end” that translates into a given effect. This is what scares most non-developers away from updating their own sites: it’s literally a whole other language.

This is where a CMS comes in. The increasing number of programming languages, an exponential increase in the sheer number of websites on the World Wide Web, and the many features now integrated with other technological gadgets (cell phones, PDA’s, networks, etc.) make it increasingly important to make sure that your content is both accurate and properly integrated into the site structure. If you have an active calendar section, for example, that lists important dates or event information but doesn’t get properly coded to print or download to peripheral devices, it sort of defeats the purpose. Or, say you want to update product information or feature a new item, but the photos don’t load properly. Even more to the point: do you really have the time or money to contact your web designer every time a change needs to be made? Probably not. If you have an integrated CMS, you don’t need to know the code.

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