Category Archives: marketing

How To Twitter Your Cool TwtBizCard

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  • @twtbizcard – Say goodbye to business cards as you know it. Send your Twitter Business Card by adding #twtbizcard to a @reply.
  • TwtBizCard Says

    Say goodbye to business cards as you know it! Send a Twitter Business Card!

    Web

    ( Offering some other very cool free twtapps as well: twtvite- event manager , twtjobs , twtTRIP , twtpoll ,etc,)

    When your recipient goes to a link on Twtbizcard, this is what your Twitter pal sees,  some of it derived in real time from your Twitter profile – you put in the phone #, address, email, and can edit anytime, also archive bizcards sent and received:

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    From The Mouth Of A Guru: What The 2010 Web Will Look Like

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    Robert Scoble is a one of the thought leaders and innovators on the web today.  He is a smart, engaging guy who gets around to listen and exchange ideas with many of the other web leaders. Scoble’s a great favorite of mine and when he speaks, I listen.  And so do a lot of other people.

    On his blog today ,Scobleizer — Exploring the 2010 Web Scoble talks about going back to basics and refocusing on his blog. He talks about what some have called his obsession with Twitter and Facebook, where he has, in fact, been a major player. Scoble explains this by saying “All my fun experiments were over on Twitter, Facebook, or friendfeed. You could see that. Mike Arrington even tried to do a friendfeed intervention last December.”  So now, Scoble is trying to bring that sense of fun, experimentation and real time zest into his newly re-invented blog.  He is also trying to show the rest of us now to do the same, in real time.

    (About a week ago I posted From The Mouth of A Guru: Why You Should Blog And Not Just Tweet which has many of the same caveats about the value of focusing your work on your own blog and letting Twitter be your outpost.)

    In that vein Scoble lays out what he thinks the future of the web will look like:

    “1. It’s real time. Twitter, Facebook and Friendfeed are all moving toward architectures and displays that refresh in real time, or let you see what’s happening right now. We are at the extreme beginnings of that trend. You really should watch the video of the panel discussion I moderated on the state of real time search to get a sense of where this is going. That panel discussion will be remembered for years as a key point. One of the panel members runs Facebook search team. Yes, Facebook is working on real time search. (That video is in two parts since the meeting ran almost two hours long. I really do recommend watching it. Part I is here. Part II is here.).
    2. It’s mobile. You’ll see this more next week when the Where 2.0 conference rolls into town, but if 40,000 iPhone apps hasn’t convinced you yet, nothing will. On Monday I’m meeting with Nokia to find out the latest.
    3. It’s decentralized. Look at my behaviors. I’m all over the place. Six years ago I did only one thing: blog. Now I Flickr. YouTube. Seesmic. Friendfeed. Facebook. Twitter. And many more. Go to Retaggr and see all the places I’m at.
    4. Pages now built out of premade blocks. You build these pages by copying a line of Javascript code to your template. This is very simple once you see how to do it, but for someone who doesn’t know code, or where in the template to go, this is VERY daunting. Silicon Valley has NOT made it simple enough yet for the mainstream to build highly useful pages. See the friendfeed block to the right of my words? I added that by copying and pasting from the friendfeed widget page. If you know where to look a TON of cool pre-built blocks like this are available for you to put on your website or blog.
    5. It’s social. This seems obvious to anyone on Twitter or Facebook, but how many businesses add their customers to their pages? Not many. Silicon Valley has done a horrible job so far of explaining why adding people to your websites matters.
    6. It’s smart. We’re seeing more and more smarts added to the web every day. Tonight Wolfram’s new search engine turned on. Have you played with it? That’s the 2010 web and check out what you can do with it.
    7. Hybrid infrastructure. When I visited 12seconds.tv in Santa Cruz they told me they were using a hybrid approach: they own a rack of servers but they also use Amazon’s S3 to “cloud burst” or take up the slack for files that are popular…

    PR People: I even made a place you can pitch me on 2010 web ideas. It’s interesting that a bunch of people are subscribed to that room — probably lots of tech bloggers looking for ideas.”

    I put in that last link so those of you who are bloggers could go fishing there for ideas.

    I’m certainly going to watching the evolution of Scobles newlly updated blog and trying some of the same tools and strategies myself.  Are you?  If you do, please leave a comment and tell us what works for you and what doesn’t.  We all in this giant web conversation together, now that Web 3.o and the interconnections of social media and dynamic linking have arrived

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    How To Gain Insulation From Competition: Foster A Tribe

    Web2.0 Business Model Check (for dummies ;-)
    Image by Alex Osterwalder via Flickr

    Not sure what the hardest thing is in business is because so much of it is challenging.  But one of the hardest things to achieve has to be “insulation from competition”.  Even if you are great at doing whatever you do, someone can always come along and replicate it. Seth Godin, marketing guru, makes the point in Seth’s Blog: Thinking about business models

    that building a “tribe”, insulates you from competition.  I can think of some examples of this.  Ben and Jerry’s Ice Cream. After all it’s only ice cream.  Volkswagon, when it brought out the Beetle.  After all it was only a car.  Apple when it introduced everything from the Mac to the Iphone.  After all, there were competing products, but for those who fell in love with the meticulous design, ease of use and the sheer enjoyment of using the product, there was only Apple.  Here’s how Seth makes that point when thinking about business models”

    “A business model is the architecture of a business or project. It has four elements:

    1. What compelling reason exists for people to give you money? (or votes or donations)
    2. How do you acquire what you’re selling for less than it costs to sell it?
    3. What structural insulation do you have from relentless commoditization and a price war?
    4. How will strangers find out about the business and decide to become customers?

    The internet 1.0 was a fascinating place because business models were in flux. Suddenly, it was possible to have costless transactions, which meant that doing something at a huge scale was very cheap. That means that #2 was really cheap, so #1 didn’t have to be very big at all.

    Some people got way out of hand and decided that costs were so low, they didn’t have to worry about revenue at all. There are still some internet hotshot companies that are operating under this scenario, which means that it’s fair to say that they don’t actually have a business model.

    The idea of connecting people, of building tribes, of the natural monopoly provided by online communities means that the internet is the best friend of people focusing on the third element, insulation from competition. Once you build a network, it’s extremely difficult for someone else to disrupt it.

    As the internet has spread into all aspects of our culture, it is affecting business models offline as well. Your t-shirt shop or consulting firm or political campaign has a different business model than it did ten years ago, largely because viral marketing and the growth of cash-free marketing means that you can spread an idea farther and faster than ever before. It also makes it far cheaper for a competitor to enter the market (#3) putting existing players under significant pressure from newcomers.

    This business model revolution is just getting started. It’s’ not too late to invent a better one.”

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    The Secret To Building A Popular Blog

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    Jon Morrow , Associate Editor of Copyblogger, who should know, shares with us this pearl of wisdom:

    The Oldest Blogging Myth

    “Content is king.”

    Well, that is pretty discouraging to those of us who focus on producing or discovering great content.  But then Jon explains what, in our hearts, we already know.  In Why No One Links to Your Best Posts And What to Do About It , Jon points out that this is no longer even Web 2.0. It’s moved beyond that.  The era of social media has arrived and that means Friends: Facebook, FriendFeed, the Twitterati. If you want to be popular, you need to start getting hooked up with very popular friends/fellow bloggers.  Or , as he puts it:

    “If you want links now, you need to be more than great. You need to be connected.

    The Secret to Building a Popular Blog

    Remember the saying “It’s not what you know, it’s who you know?”

    Well, it’s kind of true. A mediocre writer that’s friends with every member of the Technorati 100 will become a popular blogger faster than a brilliant writer with no friends at all.

    Why? Because bloggers link more often to their friends than anyone else. If you write a reasonably good piece of content that interests their audience, they’ll link to you, mainly because they like you.

    The secret to building a popular blog isn’t just writing tons of brilliant content. It’s also having tons of well-connected friends.

    How to Make Friends with Popular Bloggers

    So… how are you supposed to make friends with all of these popular bloggers and get them to link to your best posts?

    Traditional wisdom says you should link to their posts, hoping they’ll notice you and start reading your blog. Sometimes it works, but in my experience, you need to be a little more creative. Here are some ideas to get you started:

    • Write a guest post that gets lots of traffic and adoring comments
    • Attend conferences that all of the “Who’s Who” of your niche go to and network your tail off
    • Volunteer to “vote” for any posts that they’re pushing on social media sites like Digg, Del.icio.us and StumbleUpon
    • Email them an irresistible question, hoping to spark a discussion
    • Leave lots of truly memorable comments
    • Interview them in either a post or a podcast, making sure to ask lots of intelligent questions
    • Join their private membership program (like Teaching Sells) and make lots of smart posts in the forums

    Give and Ye Shall Receive

    We’re not talking about anything new here. Really, it comes down to one of the oldest principles of persuasion: reciprocity.

    Contrary to what many people think, A-list bloggers aren’t islands, separate and self-sufficient. They deal with problems and annoyances, just as much as anyone else. If you can help alleviate them, they’ll thank and remember you for it.

    The key is finding ways that you can be genuinely useful to them. Make yourself relevant and then use that opportunity to start building a relationship.

    Give it a few months, and then start pointing them to your best and most relevant content. They’ll probably link to you anytime you do anything interesting, bringing you lots of readers. They’ll also introduce you to other popular bloggers, giving you a chance to do more favors and expand your network.

    It’s hard work, but it’s worth it. If you put as much effort into building relationships as you do writing great content, you’ll have a popular blog in no time.

    And better yet, you’ll have made friends with some of the most interesting people on the web. That’s a reward in and of itself.”

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    Social Media Changes Forever The Web Business Model

    Zappos.com, Powered by Tweets
    Image by Laughing Squid via Flickr

    Remember when the Net roared on the scene and created new business models not even imaginable before?  “Opportunities where Amazon is 34x bigger than Barnes & Noble, where NetFlix destroyed Blockbuster, and where Skype is worth $2.6B while telecom companies drop like flies?”

    Jason Cohen, founder of Smart Bear Software reflects on what’s happening on the net today where, as he sees it…. and it sounds pretty reasonable to me…the same pattern is emerging, just in a different guise.

    In, Why you have to engage in social media, even if you don’t want toJason talks about how social media has already changed the rules of the game. Here’s his take:

    “The days of “have a website and advertise” are over. It’s too expensive to be noticed on an Internet that’s already full.

    Social media is the only way LinksFor.Us could get traction. If Darren Rowse or Brian Clark talks about it, it’s visible. If it hits the front page of Digg, it’s visible. Once it’s visible, once you have things like incoming links and lots of regular traffic, then you have a shot at using traditional SEO techniques for staying visible. But social media is the only way to overcome static friction (short of spending crazy money).

    Social media is already changing the rules of the marketplace, just like the web did a decade ago. It’s still early of course and no one — not even the experts — knows where all this is going. But it’s clear that times are changing again, and those that don’t jump in will go the way of print media.

    Want examples?

    • In a test run by BazaarVoice, Rubbermaid discovered that adding customer reviews to their website increased sales and decreased returns of their products. Skeptics said sales of low-rated products would crater. What actually happened is that sales of low-rated products increased. When shoppers were questioned, they explained that when they read why someone else maligned the product, often they disagreed or didn’t care about that particular problem. If the price was right, it was worth buying anyway.
    • Fog Creek software makes millions of dollars from FogBugz, a bug-tracking system. There’s hundreds of bug-tracking systems — free, cheap, expensive, open-source, commercial — yet Fog Creek is highly visible and successful with no advertising. How? Because the founder, Joel Spolsky, has built an incredibly popular blog about writing software. He was before his time; before RSS he wrote essays and notified you by email when a new one was posted. It’s widely agreed that without the blog-before-it-was-called-a-blog, Fog Creek would likely have remained an unknown consulting company with a few struggling products.
    • Nike allowed people to build and order custom shoes on their website. Skeptics said deep customization is too expensive, design-sharing is too complicated, and people need to try shoes on. Wrong! Once the site took off, Nike created physical stores where you could do the same thing.  Joaquin Hidalgo, Nike VP of Global Brand Marketing says those stores now “represent 25% of our revenue.”
    • Speaking of shoes, Zappos also sells shoes on the Internet. CEO Tony Hsieh is so convinced that their legendary Twitter presence results in sales, he even wrote a popular beginner’s guide to Twitter. He insists that Twitter and other forms of open communication are required for excellent customer service; employees are trained in Twitter. Zappos raked in $1B last year even with the recession; they’re doing something right.
    • Oddly-named marketing site Marketing.fm gets double the traffic of marketing.com. One has a blog with useful content and one doesn’t. Guess which is which.
    • Zeus Jones describes 16 more terrific examples. (Thanks to David S. Finch for digging it up.)”

    Conclusion: better jump in now while you still can and keep leveraging up with social media. Or, as Jason puts it, “Will there be another new thing someday? Sure.

    But today and for the foreseeable future, this is the world. You have to jump in even if you don’t yet understand it.”

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    How To Videocast Anything Easily and Free

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    Yes, eventually, if you wait a bit, everything in the world…..at least in the tech world…..will be free and easy.  I have not been doing videocasts because it seemed to be a speed bump in my usual turbo charged tech day:  so many devices to configure and set up.  Not to mention figuring out some of them to start with.  But now, there appears to be a simple solution to the whole enchilada.  Just go to Procaster, poke around and see if you like what you see.  I certainly do.  Then download and start shooting and broadcasting.  Did I mention it’s free?

    • Broadcast Anything

      Camera, webcam, desktop and games. With 3D effects and HD!

    • Chat & Promote

      Moderated real-time chat. Promote your stream on Twitter.

    • Everything Included

      Built in streaming service, channel page and embeddable flash player. Powered by Mogulus.

    Features

    • Record And Play

      Record & Play

      We record directly in the streaming service so your shows are available immediately for on-demand viewing.

    • Broadcast Your Camera

      Broadcast Your Camera

      Use any camera or webcam connected your computer. Support for Firewire, USB and video input cards.

    • Broadcast Your Screen

      Broadcast Your Screen

      If it’s on your screen it can be a live stream. Powerpoint, web browsing, even video and audio!

    • Broadcast Your Game

      Broadcast Your Game

      Hook directly into DirectX and OpenGL to reproduce your 3D gaming experience online.

    • Easiest to Use

      Easiest to Use

      One click live broadcasting to all your players on the internet.

    • Highest Quality

      Highest Quality

      The best quality live streaming possible, supporting 16:9, HD, and auto-adapting framerate.

    • Chat

      Chat

      Fully moderated real-time chat in all your players.

    • Promote

      Promote

      Grow your audience by sending a tweet when
      you’re live.

    • Flash Based Player

      Flash Based Player

      Link to your channel page on mogulus.com or embed your player anywhere on the internet.

    • Solid Desktop App

      Solid Desktop App

      Get away from browser limitations and unleash the full power of your computer’s processor.

    • Mix in Realtime 2D/3D

      Mix in Realtime 2D/3D

      Mix multiple inputs like a professional TV studio. Includes picture-in-picture and real time 3D layouts.

    • 100,000+ Viewers

      100,000+ Viewers

      Reach huge audiences over the massively scalable Mogulus network.

    Mac version coming soon.

    No Spyware

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    Essential For Marketers: A Facebook Page To Market Your Brand

    We’ve already talked a few weeks ago about Why You Should Start Your Own Page On Facebook and given some details on how you might want to go about executing it. Now we thought a few examples from major and savvy marketers might be very helpful for you…and for me also as I navigate making my facebook page for my brand. Adam Ostrow in Facebook Shares Tips and Case Studies for Brand Marketers describes how the big boys and gals are using this resource to market their brands:

      With its recent redesign and a slew of new features, Facebook has been moving to make Pages a focal point of the site. Personally, I recently described these changes as “the business model that moves [the company] from a successful social network to a highly profitable business.”Thus, it’s not surprising that Facebook is starting to do more to reach out to brands that might benefit from using revamped Pages. The latest example is (fittingly) a Facebook Page that the company has setup to promote “Facebook Marketing Solutions,” complete with case studies from a number of large brands using the tool, tips and how-tos, and discussion with marketers.

      The brands that Facebook is featuring include household names like Adobe, Lionsgate, and Ben & Jerry’s, but there are still some useful tidbits for those with slightly smaller budgets. For example, Ben & Jerry’s implementation of Facebook Connect is something that any website could deploy with a bit of coding work and zero marketing spend.

    • facebook ben & jerrysIt lets visitors to Ben & Jerry’s website select their favorite flavor and share it on Facebook. Then, that user’s friends see the flavor selection on their homepage, and also get a link to Ben & Jerry’s Facebook Page where they too can become a fan.

      facebook news feedMeanwhile, for brands looking to spend money on Facebook (Facebook reviews), namely by promoting their Page, the Marketing Solutions group shares a number of different types of campaigns. For example, Adobe’s “Real or Fake” campaign includes a game on the company’s Page, where users guessed whether an image was real or Photoshoped.

      Adobe describes its results: “About 10% of our page visitors played the game and, of those who played, 6% clicked the “Share” button at the end of the game, and 6% clicked “Buy Now” at the end of the game. Due to this game and media placement, our page received over 6,000 new fans too.”

      For Facebook, sharing this type of information using a Page is a great example of a company eating its own dog food so to speak. It’s also good to see that they’re both sharing tips that anyone can do – without spending significant money on Facebook – as well as case studies clearly designed to get big brands to spend big dollars on marketing their Pages.


      Additional Facebook Resources for Brands


      - New Facebook Pages: A Guide for Social Media Marketers

      - 5 Elements of a Successful Facebook Fan Page

      - 5 Tips for Optimizing Your Brand’s Facebook Presence

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    Don’t Have Enough Twitter Tools? 130+ Enormous Twitter Toolbox

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    Image via CrunchBase

    Just when you thought you had every Twitter tool imaginable……suddenly there are more….!  Take your pick.

    130+ Enormous Twitter Toolbox | Twitter Tools | Tools.

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    Do You Have The Essential Traits To Be A Successful Community Manager?

    Despite these tough economic times, some website and blogs are succeeding and growing.  How do they do it?  By a laser like focus, not on themselves, their service or product, but on community.  Successful blogs recognize what information or tools their community wants and their goal is to keep up a continuous stream of helpful, information in a simple, step by step manner.  Good community managers are able to weave in their company‘s story while supporting their community’s needs.  It’s a challenge. Stuart Foster , marketing consultant in the Boston area and author of a blog at Thelostjacket.com addresses this in 5 Essential Traits for Community Managers:

    community manager image“Community manager is the new it position in social media. To establish hardcore communities of evangelists around your brand, you need to have one. However, what makes up a successful community manager? Every community manager must have their own style and idea about how to run things for their company, right?

    Some basic tenets and rules apply regardless of the company. I spoke to some of the best in the business to get their thoughts on what makes a great community manager. I’ve narrowed it down to 5 essential traits.


    1. Loving your job


    This is absolutely essential and cannot be faked with any amount of money, time and effort. You have to absolutely love doing your job.

    Muhammad Saleem, community manager for Tip’d, recommends that you “Be incredibly patient and approachable and never lose your cool, ever. Always start with the assumption that you’re wrong and the community member (or whoever else you’re in an exchange with) is right, and work from there onwards. Always have lines of communication open with your community as well as those outside your community (even competitors) and be available to chat/discuss/troubleshoot/resolve. Remember that the community always comes first, no matter what decision you’re trying to make. All decisions should be made with the community in mind. Ask yourself, how does this improve the community experience?”

    Muhammad is able to put the community’s needs ahead of his own and maintain a calm and cool visage.


    2. Ability to promote others as well as yourself


    It’s great to push content and provide awesome information about your company to your community, but you need to provide more.

    Daniel Honigman of Tribune Interactive made this commitment from an MSM news organization: “Linking to the Sun-Times and other sources right off the bat showed our readers and followers that we were doing things differently, that we’re willing to be good netizens. For a mainstream media organization to aggregate outside content in a non-bastardized way, that’s a huge step.”

    This goes a long way in promoting more than just your corporate interests and fostering a trusting community in support of your company. It’s just common netiquette.


    3. Ability to empower & support your community


    This is essential. You can’t use your newfound powers and access for evil (you can’t go against the will of the people – some circumstances excluded).

    empower image“When instilling an attitude that isn’t one of control or management. One that people can relate to and feel comfortable with past the right culture built within the comm, you’ve got to create VALUE and make people WANT to be a part of the community and make them feel that they’re a part of something big and have that rapport spill over throughout all community members,” said Sonny Gill, a social media marketer.

    This requires a time commitment. Amber Naslund of Radian6 elaborates, “Flexibility: this isn’t a 9-5 job, nor is it always a neat and tidy job description. That means being what your company and community need you to be, when they need you. Sometimes it’s communicating, sometimes it’s listening, sometimes it’s strategy and sometimes it’s execution.”


    4. Transparent, fun, and engaging personality


    The ability to be yourself in print, on Twitter (Twitter reviews), and via other types of communication is extremely important. Amber says it essentially comes down to people skills. “It’s about being yourself, yes, but it’s also about fostering relationships between other people. You also need some good relationship/biz development skills (NOT hard sales) because you’re often the first face of a company, either online or in person. You need to really thrive on connecting with people. The passion really matters.”

    Amber came at this from a background that may not have looked exactly like that of a typical community manager, but the same traits were there. Amber’s “background is a blend of nonprofit fundraising, business development, client services, and marketing (B2B). I took a bit of a non-traditional path, but the undercurrent to all of those positions was relationship building in order to drive business. The social tools are just the mechanisms; the most important part is being passionate about stripping out all the broken ideas about impersonal communications and getting back to the idea of humans as the basis for good business. Social communications feel like the ‘home’ to me that I’ve always wanted in my job – the part of customer service and communication that always felt good and not so contrived.”

    It doesn’t really matter where you come from, as long as the same morals, attitudes and desires remain the same.


    5. Extensive knowledge about the company


    Be able to answer any question, concern, or thought directed your way. Get your CEO into the mix.

    top-down imageDaniel Honigman ran into this problem when trying to gain access to the Tribune’s management: “I was extraordinarily lucky when I started out at the Chicago Tribune by having access to folks at all levels of the newsroom.  However, you still need to make inroads with different departments and levels – groups that may traditionally be siloed – in order to get your job done quickly. You’ll find that as a result, internal communication will improve dramatically. And you can serve customer needs a hell of a lot quicker.”

    Often you will need to break down cultures ingrained within your corporation’s DNA and this can’t happen without a buy-in from management.

    Amber Naslund added, “Sometimes, you just have to shut up and realize you’re not the one with the answers. You need to have first-hand knowledge of what’s happening in your company to communicate that to customers and you need to shepherd information and insights back from your customers to your company. Sometimes the best person to provide an answer isn’t you, but you can help connect and put the right people in touch to make sure their experience with your company is always a good one. You’re more often the means than the end.”

    Community management is a delicate balance; you need to be able to serve both your company’s needs and those of your company’s community. A lot of trust, respect and responsibility comes with being the voice for your brand. It’s a lot of power, but if you use it wisely it could be a boon for your company and your community.

    So, what do you think are essential traits for a community manager?”

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    Free Personal Branding Blog Guide

    One of the key elements of success is building your personal brand.  Find what is unique and distinctive about you and build your brand around that.  How you talk, dress, think and speak are all part of your brand.  And one way to start building you brand is with a blog which is all about the topics which concern you. Dan Schawbel can help with that.

    From Personal Branding Blog – Dan Schawbel

    Why blog for your personal brand?

    There are so many reasons why blogging is good for your personal brand. A blog allows you to position yourself as an expert in your field and blogs rank very high in Google because there’s fresh content, they are keyword rich and people link to them often.  Blogs allow you to build a community around a topic, network professionally, and hopefully make new friends.  A blog will help you become a more proficient writer, gain confidence in yourself and it will make you feel empowered to reach to the stars.  From a marketing standpoint, you can get your message out for free and command the attention of the media.  There’s also bloggers who make money with advertising and AdSense.

    DOWNLOAD: “Blogging Your Brand: A Complete Guide to Your Success!”

    Personal Branding Blog

    Click here to download

    For complete table of contents go to Free 52 Page Complete Blogging Guide | Personal Branding Blog – Dan Schawbel.

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