Social Media Marketing Secrets

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Description

Social media is a powerful marketing tool, yet it is often misused and misunderstood. For social media to be effective, it must employ a solid strategy for success. Experienced social media and marketing experts Eric Rhoads and Lori McNee show you the tools you need to accomplish your goals as they relate to building and enhancing your brand, increasing your sales, and accomplishing your overall goals by using such top media tools as Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest, and others. They’ll also cover blogging basics and advice. Whether you’re just starting out or an experienced pro, you’ll discover the tools, tips, and ideas for making social media work to your benefit.

Whether you’re already using social media in your personal or business life or you’re just getting started, you’ll see how to effectively implement social media in your marketing plans.

Here is just some of what you’ll discover in the Social Media Marketing Secrets Revealed video:

  • How to effectively and affordably market your business using social media — there are over 1 billion people using these tools, and you’ll be able to reach more of them!
  • How easy it is to either get started or to expand your social media presence.
  • How to create your own website, blog, and social media profiles. There’s no need to hire high priced “geeks” to do this for you; Eric and Lori show you step-by-step what to do!
  • Why social media is like a good old-fashioned farmer’s market and how you can use that to build loyal relationships with your fans. They’ll follow you, buy more of your art, and recommend you to friends and family!
  • The one critical element you need to be successful in business. If you miss this, you won’t ever see the results you want.
  • Why just having a Facebook page isn’t enough anymore, and how simple it is to incorporate other social media outlets into your marketing plan.
  • The importance of images, especially for artists, and how to use the right images to attract attention to your posts.
  • Defining your audience so you can target them directly in your marketing efforts — you’ll save time and money if you go for the most ideal customers right away.
  • Marketing vs. branding — many business owners confuse these, but you’ll see the difference and what to do for each.
  • How to use social media marketing without feeling like a “salesperson” or someone who is yelling “Look at me! Look at me!” You’ll see how to create a community of customers that want to get to know you and your artwork better!

 

This is a golden age of opportunity for artists and creatives. Never before have you been able to get your work in front of so many people, at such a low cost, with so few gatekeepers barring the way.

With a laptop, some free and cheap software, and a healthy dose of imagination and perspiration, you can find a global audience for your work. Find enough true fans, get permission to contact them regularly, and make it easy for them to buy your work or attend your shows, and you could find yourself earning a decent living from your creative work.

No wonder the New York Times says the world is your market.

Unless, of course, you’re making some surprisingly common mistakes that are putting up barriers between you and your would-be fans and customers.

Here’s a list of the top 10 internet marketing mistakes by artists and creatives that I see week-in, week out – and what to do about them.

I should point out that over the past five years of marketing my own creative business online, I’ve made several of these mistakes myself. It’s too painful to watch others repeating them, so I’m listing them here to help you avoid them.

If your online activities are just for a hobby, or for creative inspiration, then move along, there’s nothing to worry about here. But if you want your blog, email newsletter or social networking activities to bring you new clients and customers, you can’t afford to make the mistakes on this list.

And I’m assuming you are awesome. You do great work, that you’re proud of, and the customers you have are delighted. You’d just like a few more of them.

1. Not Doing It

I hear all kinds of reasons why creative people are passing up the opportunities available on the internet right now: they don’t know what to do, they don’t know how to do it, they don’t have the time, they’re not convinced it will work, they don’t like computers, they’re worried about people stealing their work. Take your pick.

I’m not saying you have to do this. Like the magic theatre in Herman Hesse’s novel Steppenwolf, it’s not for everyone. I’m just saying you’re missing out if you don’t.

The customers who could have found you via Google are finding other people. The bloggers who could have linked to your site are linking to other sites. The people who could have shared your stuff on Twitter are sharing other people’s stuff. The collaborators you could have met and worked with are having a blast working with other partners.

And it’s not just about the money. You’re also missing out on a lot of new friends and creative inspiration. I’ve lost count of the number of interesting people and ideas I’ve encountered since I started marketing my business online.

Solution: Do it.

Find the time, or make it. Learn the technical stuff – it’s not rocket science, if a poet like me can manage it, so can you.

And learn what works, so you’re not wasting your time and energy. A good place to start is Brian Clark’s free e-book Authority Rules: the 10 Rock Solid Elements of Online Marketing. And I’ll have plenty more to say about how these principles apply to artists and creatives, so treat yourself to a free subscription to Lateral Action.

2. Relying on Your Portfolio

Having a totally amazing portfolio (or online gallery, or showcase) is essential, but sadly it isn’t nearly enough to make you stand out online.

However good the work, the static nature of most portfolios means people have to seek them out, visit your website and click through the various categories. And most people have never heard of your site. Or maybe they have, but they’re just too busy to visit it. Or they visited it once, liked it – and forgot to go back.

Solution: build an audience by delivering fresh media content to them, regularly, for free.

Most first-time visitors to your site are not going to buy anything. So sell them a free subscription – to a blog, newsletter, podcast or video series. Send them amazing stuff, so that they don’t have to come and find it. And so that they look forward to opening your e-mails and finding your latest post in their blog reader.

Content marketing is a big trend in internet marketing right now – it basically means publishing media content that doesn’t look like advertising, but functions like advertising. You’re not selling anything directly, you are giving people a taste of your work, for free. This generates buzz, with people talking about you on Twitter, linking to your site from their blog, and forwarding your e-mails to their friends – i.e. they start doing your marketing for you, for free.

And who are the experts at creating stunning media content? That would be you. In this brave new world, artists and creatives have an unfair advantage at internet marketing.

3. Social Media Narcissism

We’ve all seen them. The blog posts, Tweets, Facebook updates and MySpace pages full of the minute, tedious details of an artist’s day, or the navel-gazing posts about their personal philosophy, and/or how much they suffer for their Art. Or name-dropping of ‘impressive’ clients. Or complaints about partners, friends, fellow artists or the world in general.

Nobody wants to read this stuff. And nobody wants to buy from people who write it.

I write a lot online, but I hardly write anything about my personal life, as I can’t imagine anyone would be remotely interested. And I do my best to keep my gripes to myself, as they wouldn’t make anyone else’s day better.

It’s not about you. So, unless you habitually fight dragons or have a gift for making the mundane hilariously funny or poignantly engaging, be careful how much you talk about yourself, your personal life and opinions. (Save that for family and friends, who love you just for who you are.)

People who stand out and succeed online, whether using a blog or another kind of platform, do so by delivering massive value to their fans and customers. They publish hilarious cartoons, music that gets under your skin, funny one-liners, Or they lift the lid on their creative process, or publish useful tutorials and videos. They inform, entertain and educate – sometimes all at once.

They don’t go online to share what they had for breakfast, or to slag off the competition, or whine about their girlfriend or the lousy customer service they received. They go online to delight and amaze people.

Even when it is about you, it’s not about you.

It’s about what you mean to your audience. If you’re doing amazing work, or pursuing a big adventure, it’s about the work and the adventure. If you’re a rock star, it’s about what they project onto you. If you’re a successful self-employed artist, it’s about the inspiration and example you provide for other artists. So it’s really about them.

Solution: give people a taste of your best work.

If you’re an artist of any kind, give away free samples. Tell us – even better, show us – how you make your work. To you it’s obvious, to the rest of us it could be fascinating. Share the resources you can’t do without. Or enthuse about your creative heroes. Or write a tutorial to teach others what you know. Or make a video of your latest show. Or make a passionate argument for changing something about your industry or art form.

In other words, when you go online, put yourself on the line – not the crotchety, bored, out-of-sorts side of you, but your best self – your most passionate, articulate, creative, inspiring self.

4. Hosting Your Blog on Blogger.com

Once upon a time, Blogger.com was an innovative platform at the cutting edge of online publishing. But that time has gone. Now, using it for a business blog makes you look like an amateur – the equivalent of using a Hotmail email address. The themes are ugly, the functionality is clunky and the commenting facilities are horrible. But none of these are the main reason you should avoid Blogger (or similar free hosted blogging services).

If you rent a property, you have to follow the landlord’s rules. If you paint the walls an unauthorized colour, have too many late-night parties, or demolish the conservatory, you’ll be served with an eviction notice. And there’s no point spending your time and money installing a new bathroom or insulating the roof, as you’ll just be adding value to someone else’s property.

But if you buy a property, you own it (assuming you pay the mortgage). You can do any legal thing you like in it. You can paint it orange and install a Jacuzzi. You can add an extension, or a new kitchen – and the value of your property will increase the more you invest in it.

Blogger is the rented property. It’s owned by Google, who can evict you if you violate their terms of service. If you improve the property – e.g. by creating a fabulous, popular blog – all the appreciation in value (incoming links, traffic, search engine rankings) of the property goes to Google (by default, your blog’s address will be yourblogname.blogspot.com, i.e. Google’s domain, not yours). The same goes for a MySpace or Facebook page, or any of your social networking profiles. If you invest all your content marketing efforts (see no.2) on someone else’s website, you risk becoming someone’s user-generated content.

Solution: Install WordPress on your own web domain.

Your own website is your property. It should be located at yourname.com or yourcompanyname.com. As long as you stay within the law, you can do whatever you like with it. If you improve the property – e.g. by creating a fabulous, popular blog – all the extra value accrues to you, the owner. So it makes sense to improve it as much as you can.

This is why most professional bloggers install WordPress on their own site. It’s free open source software, and incredibly powerful and flexible. All my sites run on WordPress, even the ones that don’t look like blogs.

There are lots of free design themes available for WordPress, but for business purposes you’re better off with a premium theme, as they usually include technical support, and I’m told by people who know that the underlying code is often better structured for search engine optimisation (SEO) purposes. Here at Lateral Action I use the Genesis framework with a bespoke design. If you’re on a budget you can use Genesis and choose from a range of ready-made custom designs.

The only drawback with WordPress is that it’s technically more of a fiddle to set it up and maintain, so you might want to enlist some help. And be prepared for a bit of a learning curve. But this is your business, remember, not a hobby. This is one case where ‘quick and easy’ can hurt your business in the long term. And like I say, I’m a poet, not a programmer, so if I can work it out, so can you.

N.b. Make sure you download WordPress from WordPress.org – not WordPress.com(which is an excellent free hosted blogging service, but it’s still a rented property).

5. Writing Useless Headlines

By ‘useless’ I mean a headline that doesn’t work hard for you, to attract visitors to read your blog posts, download your podcasts, watch your videos or listen to your music. People won’t magically know you’ve created great work – you need to signpost it with a clear and compelling headline that stops them in their tracks and makes them click to visit your site.

Imagine your headline is just one of hundreds in someone’s inbox or feed reader, or in a long list of updates on Facebook or Twitter. If you write something boring like ‘new blog post’ or enigmatic like ‘Murky Waters’, you haven’t given them any reason to click, so all your work has been wasted.

Solution: Learn to write magnetic headlines – click the link for an in-depth tutorial. And use them.

Don’t be too proud to use the headline formulas. They’ve been proven to work. And don’t be tempted to come up with something more ‘creative’, original or mysterious. You can hit people with the ‘creative, original and mysterious’ stuff once they actually land on your website. The headline’s job is to get people to do that.

If you don’t believe me, or if you think the usual copywriting formulas don’t apply to your work, then experiment with using both kinds of headline. That’s what I did, until I realised the tried-and-tested formulas did apply to my work, and did work better than the other kind.

6. Not Building a Mailing List

All the top internet marketers agree that ‘the money’s in the list’. And that many millionaires can’t be wrong.

By ‘list’, they mean a mailing list of e-mail addresses, that people have given them as an expression of interest in their products or services.

Whether or not you want to be a millionaire, if you aren’t using your website to collect e-mail addresses of potential customers, then your website is like a bucket with a hole in it. And it doesn’t matter how much water you pour in the bucket (i.e. how much traffic you get to your site) if it all drains out the bottom.

Solution: Set up a mailing list and ask people to join it.

It’s that simple, at least in its most basic form. Put a prominent signup form on your website, and ask people to give you their e-mail address if they want to know about your latest products and services. Then, next time you have a product or service to announce – you can guess what’s coming – send an e-mail and invite them to buy it.

You need to use a reputable email marketing service provider. Not only will this make it easy for you to manage hundreds or thousands of email contacts, when spam filters see that your mail is being sent by a provider with a good reputation, they’ll open the doors and let your messages through. I use Aweber and recommend it to my clients.

Here’s an example of a barebones mailing list, over at my Wishful Thinking site. All I’m doing is asking people to let me send them sales pitches – and people are signing up. And when I send them the sales pitch, some of them buy. It’s not a particularly big list, but it’s an absurdly small amount of work for me to maintain it, and it’s generating sales. It could do the same for you.

Of course, your list will grow much faster, and make more sales, if you put more effort into it. Here at Lateral Action, I’m offering a free 25 week course for artists and creatives, as an incentive to join my list. Which means that list has grown to over 4,000 subscribers after less than five months, and generates a lot more sales than the other one. But the same basic principle applies – asking people for permission to send them marketing messages. Which brings me to the next big mistake…

7. Adding People to Your Mailing List without Permission

This happens to me every week, and it still amazes me that people think it’s acceptable, let alone effective marketing. I’ll meet someone (online or offline) and a few days later start receiving their newsletter, even though I’ve never asked for it, or been offered the choice.

Often, there’s no ‘unsubscribe’ link at the bottom of the email (a legal requirement in many parts of the world). So the only way to get off the list is to email them directly and ask to be removed. Which would be uncomfortable for both of us.

In some countries, you may well be breaking the law by adding people to your list in this way. You are also damaging your reputation. How do you feel every time you receive an unsolicited email? Even if you like the person and the newsletter is good, it’s hard not to think “Surely they could have asked…”.

Plus the more people who hit the ‘report spam’ button when they receive your emails, the more chance you have of ending up on a spam blacklist, which means you’ll find it harder and harder to get your emails delivered.

Solution: Invite people to subscribe, and make it worth their while.

The essential requirement for building a non-spammy list is that you ask people to opt in, by putting their e-mail address in a web form. You also need to give people the option to unsubscribe at any time – the easiest way to do this is to include an ‘unsubscribe’ link at the foot of every email you send. Don’t worry about the technicalities of how to do this: Aweber, or any other decent email service provider, will walk you through the process each time you set up a new list.

No, this isn’t as easy as adding people to your list without permission, and your list will grow more slowly. But if you want a quality mailing list – composed of people who are genuinely interested in hearing from you, as opposed to people who may be indifferent or downright annoyed by your messages – it’s the only way to go.

As an incentive to subscribe, it’s normal to offer a free gift. You don’t need to give away a 25-week course – other popular options are sample music tracks, ebooks, shorter email courses, and regular newsletters.

8. Using Social Networks for Socializing

OK I’m being slightly provocative with this one. Of course social networks are for socializing – but if you look at them purely as a way to keep in touch with friends, you’re missing out on a golden opportunity to build your professional network and get your marketing content (see no.2) shared widely, bringing you new visitors, subscribers and customers.

But if all you’re doing is hanging out on Facebook sharing cat videos or playing zombie games with your usual circle of friends, you’re not doing your business any favours. And depending on what you share about your private life and opinions, you could be actively harming your business. Are you comfortable with the thought of potential customers scanning your profile, status updates and photos? Because they’re doing it.

Solution: Target the most relevant social networks and use them to build your professional network and get your content into circulation.

Read through my article The Top 10 Social Networks for Creative People. Pick one or two networks that look most relevant to your business. Get to know interesting and potentially helpful people in your field. Share links to your own and others’ content.

Make it clear where you hang out online by adding ‘follow me’ or ‘connect with me’ links to your website. And encourage visitors to bookmark, Tweet and share links to your content by adding ‘share this’ buttons to your site.

9. Making It Hard to Buy

I once asked a writer friend why he didn’t have prominent links to his books on the sidebar of his blog. Here’s what he said:

But surely they can find them on Amazon?

Yes, they can, but they won’t.

Unless you include a prominent link, they won’t look on Amazon. They won’t rummage through your site to find your shop. They won’t know you’ve written a book, or recorded an album, or that you have artwork for sale, or that you could design them a fabulous website. They won’t magically guess what you have to offer.

They won’t know what you want them to do – buy your work, come to your show, hire you for a project – unless you ask them.

And they won’t understand the value of your work unless you spell it out and show them what you put into it, and what they get out of it.

They won’t buy if they’re afraid to ask the price, or whether you ship overseas, or whether it’s too heavy to mount on the wall, or whether it will play on their MP3 player, or whether you charge by the hour or the project, or whether you do the copywriting or just the design, or whether they have to sign up for an annual subscription or whether they can just buy an hour of your time.

Solution: Tell people what you want them to do. Explain the buying process and make it easy.

Have prominent links to your shop, gallery or ‘hire me’ page. If you’re selling goods, make it quick and easy to buy. Display prices clearly. Have one or two options for shipping, and say how long it will take. Spell out your guarantee and returns policy. Take credit cards and Paypal. Don’t make people set up an account before letting them buy. Test your checkout to make sure it works!

If you’re selling services, reduce anxiety by explaining what you do, how you do it, how long it will take, how you charge (by the hour/day/project) and how much it’s likely to cost. Testimonials help, especially if you include customers’ names and website addresses. Make it easy to contact you with enquiries.

10. Doing Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Back-to-Front

Every time I run my workshop on Internet Marketing for Creative People, a hand goes up and someone asks how they can ‘optimize their website with the right keywords’.

While keywords are definitely important, it’s a common misconception that the most important thing you need to do to get a new website to rank well on search engines is to fiddle about with the keywords in your website text, as well as the hidden meta tags at the top of the page.

Firstly, forget the meta tags. Google ignores them.

Secondly, when starting out with a new website, it’s more important to attract links from other websites than to get caught up in the fine detail of keywords on your site. When search engines see a lot of inbound links to a website, they take that as a strong indicator of the value of the site – particularly if the links come from sites that they already rank highly.

This is why for several years I managed to rank very well on search engines and attract a lot of search engine traffic – even though I didn’t bother doing SEO in the usual sense. Because I was writing a blog that people enjoyed, I naturally attracted a lot of links from other bloggers, which was a good thing in Google’s eyes.

Don’t ask for link exchanges. No-one with a site worth getting links from will take you seriously if you do that. Instead, content marketing (see no.2) is a much more effective way of attracting valuable links.

Here’s a quote from Brian Clark, who knows a lot more about SEO than I do:

Here’s the deal . . . much of what determines the ranking position of any particular page is due to what happens off the page, in the form of links from other sites. Getting those links naturally has become the hardest part of SEO, which is why we’ve seen the mainstream emergence of social media marketing as a way to attract links with compelling content.

Put simply: If your content isn’t good enough to attract good, natural links, it doesn’t matter how “optimized” that content is.

(Brian Clark, How to Create Compelling Content that Ranks Well in Search Engines.)

Now I’ll admit I ignored SEO for far too long. It wasn’t until last year that I really started to take it seriously. I could have done even better if I’d take the trouble to learn the basics of SEO earlier – so don’t make my mistake.

Solution: First, Produce great content (see no.2) that will naturally attract links from other sites. Then optimize your most important pages.

And once you have some inbound links and quality content to optimize, then it’s worth investing some time tweaking the keywords on your site. That’s why it’s called search engine optimization.

A tool I use and recommend for this is Scribe – it basically reviews the text you’ve written and gives you a detailed feedback about how it will look to a search engine – and what you can do to tweak it and improve your rankings.


Well, there it is. You’ll notice that a lot of the solutions I’m proposing take more time and effort than the ‘quick and easy’ alternatives. There’s no getting round the fact that internet marketing is a medium-to-long-term approach – but if you’re serious about making a successful business out of your creative work, that’s the timescale you should focus on anyway.

And the good news is, if you get the fundamentals right, you can have a lot of fun with this stuff. If you ask me, creating amazing media and hanging out with interesting creative people online beats cold-calling or paying for advertising any day.

If you want to know more about leveraging the internet to build a business around your creative talents, you’re welcome to download and share my new ebook Freedom, Money, Time – and the Key to Creative Success.

If the ideas in the ebook touch a chord for you, you may like to know that The Creative Entrepreneur Roadmap (formerly known as the Lateral Action Entrepreneur Roadmap) will soon open its doors to a new group of students. If you want to be first in line when the course opens (and to read the second free ebook I’ve written) you can hop on the advance notice list.


You present yourself best on social media if you get the image size tailored to the site.

The problem is all the different social media sites have different image size requirements.

Below you will find a very helpful cheat sheet which is the replacement for the yellow sticky note which lives permanently on my desktop and has all the various image sizes for the sites I use. It comes courtesy of on makeawebsitehub.com.

Do go to the website and read the helpful notes (below the infographic) about how best to optimize images for different social media sites in terms of::

  • pixel height and width dimensions
  • the best sort of image to use
  • resolution
  • file size
  • embedding
  • where and when an image will be seen

The social media sites it covers include:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Google +
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Linked In and
  • Ello
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YouTube Best Practices

An actionable course that will show you how to have more success with your YouTube channel, get more views & subscribers

<p “=””>Do you want to start a YouTube Channel?<p “=””>Do you need help getting more views and subscribers?<p “=””>Do you desire to make money with your YouTube Channel?<p “=””>This mini-course will get you started on a successful YouTube journey. In this course, you’ll learn some of YouTube’s best practices for growing your own channel. These lessons come from the complete YouTube Masterclass, an amazing course on Udemy that will walk you through the entire process of YouTube success.<p “=””>Start with this free course, and if you want to be serious about becoming a YouTuber, enroll in the YouTube Masterclass by Phil Ebiner and Mike & Lauren Moyer.<p “=””>In this class you’ll learn:

  • How finding a specific target audience can help you grow faster
  • How being consistent is the key to YouTube success
  • How to create videos that are sustainable and easy to find with YouTube search
  • How to create videos that are organically more likely to be shared
  • How to collaborate with other YouTubers, and why this can lead to rapid growth
  • How interacting with viewers creates raving fans (and why this is important)
  • How being authentic will help your channel grow.
Now that your social life is all set up and in order, time for the content to put on it.  We do this by blogging from our website.  This way the traffic from your social network travels to your website and converts to sales.
Are you an artist who wants to have a blog?
Or maybe an artist who wants to work on improving your blog? 

Here you will find links to advice and information relevant to blogging for artists and blogging by artists.


This page focuses on:

  • blogging basics
  • blogging for artists
  • problems encountered by artists who blog and how to deal with them

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PS My main art blog Making A Mark has had more than 4 million visitors, 11.5+ million pageviews and is ranked in the

Section Contents

This site is in transition from another site to this site – and it’s a big page!
Sections still to transfer are in lighter grey

Starting and Improving a Blog

  • Why artists should blog
  • How to improve your art blog
  • Why content is so important and how to improve it
  • How to get readers for your blog

Technical

  • Which blogging platform
  • Blog Law
  • Making a Mark – Guides to Blogging
  • Comments systems which control spam
  • How to increase followers
  • Feedreaders
  • The ‘long tail’ and why it’s relevant to selling art

Types of Art Blogs (in progress)

  • The BEST Art Blogs
  • Blogging and a painting a day

Tools, tips and techniques (in progress)

  • Titles, Links, Labels and Archives
  • Favicons, Design and Colour
  • Images and online storage
  • SEO and keywords
  • Blogging Conduct
  • Security Online
  • Blog statistics and software – visitors and page views

When things go wrong 

  • Theft of blog content and what to do about it
  • Pinterest for Visual Art Bloggers – concerns about copyright

Top Tips for Blogging

The Best Art Blogs

Here are some quick tips to be going on with

From Blog Experts


Starting and Improving a Blog

Why artists should blog

Have you been thinking about having a blog for your art? Read the links to blog posts find out some of the reasons why artists have thought this could be a very good idea………

I start with some posts I’ve written on my own art blog which has now had

  • over 4 million visitors and
  • over 11 million page views

A number of the views below were written some years ago when having an art blog was a big deal.

However. if you’re NEW TO BLOGGING your art, it’ll still feel like a big deal to you and most of what is written will still be very relevant to you.

​Posts from my Making A Mark blog:

  • Why artists should blog
    Some statistics and other information to help you think about why artists should have a blog (note – this was written in 2006 and I’m still blogging and it’s now 2017!)
  • Notice Me! (or why you should get an art blog)
    Notice Me! is the name of the Student Supplement produced for the September 2010 Edition of the Artists & Illustrators Magazine in the UK. This included an interview with me concerning how students can get recognised by using a blog to promote th
  • Notice Me! Creating a popular art blog
    What follows is the second part of my note on blogging for the article in the Notice Me! supplement for student artists in Artists & Illustrators (A&I) in September 2010.
  • Why be an art blogger?
    What’s the point in producing an art blog like mine which focuses more on art in general rather than my own art? Well because sometimes you get letters like the one below.

Posts by other art bloggers


The Technical Bit

Which Blogging Platform/webware?

Choosing which blogging platform to use is a big decision because moving a blog at a later date can be a bit of a pain!

  • Each has its own unique pros and cons
  • Plus options for third party comments systems

Time to check out which is the right blogging platform and webware for you

Find out about the different webware platforms for blogging. They each have different features and different approaches to blogging – but they also have a lot in common.

One feature that is consistent is that there has been a lot of development over time – so base your judgements on blogging platforms based on what they can do right now – not why somebody rejected a particular platform in the past

Blogger

Blogs using Blogger

  • I’ve used Blogger from the very beginning and started Making A Mark on Blogger in 2006 and have stuck with it – and have never found a good reason to move. It now has over 3,000 posts, over 4 million visitors and over 11 million pageviews.
  • James Gurney also has a very popular 10 year old blog – Gurney Journey – also running on Blogger

PROS

  • doesn’t cost a penny / no costs for hosting, templates or plugins
  • very simple to use (and used by a lot of bloggers)
  • customer responsive templates means it automatically adjusts to any size screen
  • Blogger looks after ALL the techie bits. Over the past 11 years it’s had the odd problem, generally sorted out pretty fast
  • started fairly basic but has evolved over time and now has lots of functionality
  • free blogspot sub-domain OR you can have your own (and pay for) domain name if you wish
  • Google owned – which means it’s in Google’s interest to ensure it performs well and doesn’t wobble in technical terms

CONS

  • not seen as the “smart move”
  • other platforms have scope for more functionality through plugins

REFERENCE:

WordPress

Blogs using WordPress

  • Lines and Colors – Charley Parker has been writing about art and illustration since 2005

PROS

  • started as a blogging system and has grown to become a full content management system; often used by those who want websites, blogs and ecommerce platform on same domain
  • lots of options for templates, widgets and plug-ins for look and functionality

CONS

  • need to self-host for WordPress.org webware – and host must be able to support PHP and MySQL
  • you look after the techie end – and because lots of templates and plugins are provided by smaller outfits you may be left adrift if they disappear

REFERENCE:

  • WordPress – About – WordPress started in 2003; now the largest self-hosted blogging tool in the world, used on millions of sites and seen by tens of millions of people every day.

Typepad

tended to be used more by writers than artists and big companies

PROS

  •  14 day free trial
  • lots of templates
  • designed for professionals and small businesses

CONS

  • you need to pay to use the platform – see pricing (4 different subscription levels)
  • once a serious competitor for WordPress but now a minor player
  • experienced a a major DDoS attack in April 2014 and unavailable for 6 days

REFERENCE:

REFERENCE:

REFERENCE – TECHNICAL BLOGGING TERMS

  • Weblog software – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia – Weblog software (also called blog software or blogware) is a category of software which consists of a specialized form of Content Management Systems specifically designed for creating and maintaining weblogs.

Comments systems which engage and control spam

Comments systems which control spam

Blogs are a big target for spammers – so you need a system which enables you to control spam.

In over six years of using Blogger I have had very little difficulty with spam comments. This is because:

  • I moderate all comments
  • I use the Word ID system which means that automated spam commenting systems can’t get past it
  • I check out the IDs of all people leaving URLs in their comment to see if they are identifiable and/or whether the link relates to a commercial operation. The only ones allowed are those which are completely relevant to the topic and to artists

I RECOMMEND you always try the built-in comments systems and the options it offers for the control of comments and the prevention of spam before you try any alternative systems

REFERENCE

Alternative third party comment systems – and spam

You may want to try alternative systems for management of comments. Alternative third party comments systems include:

They vary in terms of which blogging platforms and browsers they support.

Bear in mind that:

  • much of what a third party systems are about relate to getting a site noticed. They can be less good on identifying exactly how they control spam – check out the Disqus site for example!
  • the comments system you might see running on big corporate sites is very unlikely to be the free on which is available to the general public. The Pro version of Disqus for example costs $99 per month.
  • third party comments systems often integrated better with other social media platforms but not all integrate well with mobile blogging systems. If you have a lot of people who comment via their cellphones or iPads etc this may be important to you.
  • some of the reviews of comments systems are about systems which aid spammers – not prevent them (eg scraping systems)

FREE Guides to Blogging for Artists

Guides written by Katherine Tyrrell and published by Making A Mark Publications

My publications are available for personal educational use only and can be downloaded FREE as pdf files


How to improve your art blog

You agree it’s a good idea and you’ve now got a blog – but you aren’t getting as many visitors as you would like.
Read about how to improve your art blog

First my blog posts on this topic:

Plus an article I wrote for The Good Web Guide – which likes to characterise itself as “the ‘thinking man’s google’.”

Articles by other commentators:


Theft of blog content and what to do about it

Links to useful sources of information and advice about plain ordinary thieves and sploggers – spam bloggers who steal content – and what to do about them

What I’ve written about theft of blog content on Making A Mark and what to do about it

See also my sections on

Articles by other bloggers