A Short Series – Blog Interviews – Laying Out Your Email

asianwritinganemail A Short Series – Blog Interviews – Laying Out Your Email

If you missed the first post in this series, make sure you check it out here.

Beyond getting in contact with your interviewee, you need to be asking the proper questions to him or her. If I were to pick anyone to interview, they would obviously be in my niche and someone successful at it (Darren Rowse for instance). Now, these top guys get 100s of other emails and inquiries every day, so I need to make my subject title stick out. These guys are immediately deleting the emails that ask “How can I make 10,000 dollars in my first month of blogging?”

Make the Subject Interesting

I won’t be asking “Can I interview you?” in the subject. Generally, these get turned down because they are just so busy and can’t take enough time out of their day to do a little networking with you. Instead, say something interesting in the topic. “Hey, did you know this about your blog?” or “I’ve got something interesting to share with you about blogging.” Anything, be creative, use your imagination, but you need to stay friendly. I sure as hell wouldn’t reply to an email saying “I want to know why your blog sucks so much.” Then again, that could work.

Introduce Yourself

So we are past the subject. Now, you will want to say Hey, (Blogger’s Name), or whatever formality that you feel appropriate. I discussed this in the first post of this series. Then, put in a small introduction. When I mean small, I mean short and sweet and small. Your name, your blog, and a few other short details about yourself are enough. You aren’t interviewing yourself here, you are interviewing them.

Why did I decide to interview you?

Leave a short message about the interview next. Why you chose them, and what you plan to do with any answers. Let this, again, be simple. You can’t bore the blogger into closing your email. A few sentences about the details of the questions is enough.

Get on with it

Now what? Just get into the questions. Don’t wait to see if they agree to arranging an interview. It just creates hassle and once again, the blogger won’t want to separate time from daily activities to answer your questions.

Make it Easy

Write your questions out and make them clear and noticeable. Maybe bold them, bullet them, make them bigger. Do anything to draw attention to this point. This is the most important part of the email, and you won’t want to skimp.

Say Goodbye

After your questions have been asked, conclude it. Say thanks and I hope to hear from you; all that goodness and candy to make them feel appreciated. Don’t threaten them by saying you won’t read them anymore if they don’t reply. That’s pretty ridiculous to think anyways. I don’t need pissy readers. Just realize they were probably too busy to answer.

Ask the Right Questions

Or, perhaps, you just asked the wrong questions. I will be covering that in the next series post.

No Passion? 20 Reasons Why You Should Blog with Passion

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What is the driving force behind any great writer? How about for any great blogger? No matter what you are writing about, you should not be writing for money. Even if your blog is about money, don’t write for money. Any good writer will tell you they write because they have a passion for it. Any great blogger will tell you just the same.

This is why we have niche blogs. You shouldn’t be picking a blog niche that is “guaranteed to make money” unless that niche is one you truly have a passion for. I quite enjoy writing and blogging, so I joined in the ‘writing a blog’ niche. I have a huge interest in technology, and live 1 KM from one of the largest technology store complexes in the world, which is why I just opened pcmonitorreview.com. Both of these blogs allow me to passionately write about what I love.

Think about the great things you can blog when you truly love what you are writing about. Those were some good posts, right? So keep writing about that. Don’t jump off the boat and swim in murky waters, if you know what I mean, unless you are truly interested in murky waters. Let that interest guide your writing. If you lose that interest, if you lose that passion, stop and rethink your blogging plan. Is this what you wanted? No.

The benefits about writing from your passions are limitless.

  1. Gain a sense of fulfillment from your blog posts
  2. You will write much better
  3. You may write a lot quicker allowing for more time outside of blogging
  4. Readers love blogs that are fueled by passion
  5. You are less likely to need outside reference to write a blog post
  6. You can just get an idea and instantly write about it
  7. You will have more to blog about
  8. You will have more personal experience listed in the blog
  9. Easier to think of a blog post
  10. Easier to think of a blog topic name
  11. Get satisfaction from letting others know about what you love
  12. Makes you want to actively participate in the community
  13. Community will come to you for answers
  14. Less headaches
  15. Don’t need to think about writing as it comes naturally
  16. You don’t have to find a blog topic, the topic finds you
  17. Passion comes with original content
  18. More fluid blog entries
  19. Become the professional of the community
  20. Create a very strong voice

Those are just 20 of my ideas about blogging from passion. I know there are a ton of other ideas that could be written here, but I want to leave chances open for the community to respond. Do you write from passion? If not, how the hell do you do it?

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Your Time and Effort Towards Blogging Means Nothing

Many new bloggers get upset or frustrated when their blog isn’t the smash hit they thought it would be.
“The time and effort I put into this blog article should be getting more comments, more page views, more Stumbles or Diggs, and I should be making 100s of dollars a month by now,” says blog noob to his subscribers. I thought this myself when I started blogging. I thought I had the killer domain (moneyandblog(dot)com actually is a pretty killer domain for a make money on your blog niche), I thought I put up quality posts, and I thought I was doing everything I could to get control of the blogosphere. Notice the keywords? “I thought.”

This is a challenge new bloggers will have to get over. No matter how enthusiastic you are about your material, no matter how much you paid for that hosting plan built for Wordpress, and no matter how much you might think you are encouraging you blog readers to comment, don’t expect too much. Your time and effort you exhausted to post a blog is not pinged. Unless you just wrote the most comprehensive list of Adsense alternative affiliate programs (hehehe) or a 20 page report on the human rights issues going on in North Korea (hehehe), don’t start believing your readers will understand that amount of time. No one sees what goes on behind their computer screen. In the end you are the only real judge of the amount of effort put into your blog

A tip to new bloggers: High expectations lead to disappointments, while low expectations have exactly the opposite effect. Aim low and you might see your effort be all worthwhile. I’m not saying you shouldn’t aim for high goals, but don’t think you are a blogging rocket being propelled into the upper reaches of the blogosphere. Building a successful blog will take time, effort, pain and loss. After a little over a month of serious blogging I can already tell you this.

Outside from myself, I get very little from blogging. My affiliate programs are miserable right now (why are you more willing to click on Google ads?), so I am not making very much money. I’ve spent nearly 14 hours on weekend days troubleshooting my blogs, writing posts, editing blogs, configuring advertising, commenting other blogs, and setting up links to my contest. Lately, I’ve been sleeping only 3 – 4 hours a night because I want to get in one more post or one more link before I sleep. (You don’t have to remind me how unhealthy this is. Don’t worry. I took a nap at school today, and took 1 hour off of work every week) Honestly, I have never ever been so dedicated to anything in my life. Not even my girlfriend (No, I have never cheated on her, and yes, that is my supermodel girlfriend ;-) … ) The time and effort I’ve put into this blog is staggering, both a loss, but it all still feels like I am gaining so much from the experience.

There is this thing called satisfaction. Satisfaction is what should drive any writer, bloggers included. This is what keeps me up those sleepless nights. The money and success possible from it is all something I put on the sidelines. Learn to be satisfied with your blogging, without the need of others, and I guarantee you will start to see a change in your blogging. Comments and links should never really be in the back of your head when writing a blog entry. Pretend you are the only one that will ever read the post, and any extra subscriber is just a little surprise in your Feedburner stats. It is their way of saying I appreciate the way you write.

I will write more on how to gain satisfaction from your blog in a future post, but first, I want to know what you blog for. Fame? Wealth? Satisfaction? Men that pretend to be young women over AIM (we all know your chances of dating an attractive woman you met on Myspace is 1 in 34 million. Funny I am saying this when I dated 3 of my 4 serious girlfriends from Myspace)?

Tell me your story. Remember, all comments will be considered in a giveaway for a free month of advertising on this blog!

To Sponsor or Not: Blogging for Pay Per Post Services

This blog was recently approved for a pay-per post service, Sponsored Reviews. Sponsored Reviews is just one of several, such as Smorty and PayPerPost that offers you money to post about predefined topics, normally a website, service or product. Payments on Sponsored Reviews start at about 5 dollars per post, which Sponsored Reviews takes a percentage of (I think you keep about 65% or so). You write a quick post 50-500 words in length (determined by the advertiser), add some links in, and post. Simple as that, and you have made some really easy money. The main problem with these kinds of services, is that if Google sees this, Google cuts up your PageRank and flushes it down the toilet. We all just love Google, don’t we? So should PPP be part of your blogging monetizing plan?

Stop-blogging
My question to myself when entering this article was: Should I post for SponsoredReviews (dot) com? Google seems on edge more than ever, disabling my Adsense account, destroying their referral program, and now cutting page rank for what is basically advertising. What my question comes down to, is PageRank really important for my blog, Blogosis, to be successful, or would I obtain more money going ahead with Sponsored Review.What is PageRank useful for? Bigger advertisers will want to gain links from highly ranked web pages and blogs. Also, pages with a higher rank get better results for Google search results, especially with competitive keywords. Is this important for Blogosis as it stands now? No.I am building links to this blog using word of mouth, commenting other blogs, social media, personal contacts, and my contest seems to be building up the steam, too. I have done very little search engine optimization. While it is in the works, I just don’t feel like this blog has reached a point where I really need to focus on keywords, especially cause the topic of blogging is so broad. I also have a deep disgust for Google. They already took my money, they don’t need anymore for my keywords.So in this sense, yes why not post with Sponsored Reviews? I will tell you why I am still iffy about it. It would make my blog look messy, I might have to try and sell a product that I don’t really endorse, and with that comes the ethics of pay to post.I don’t want to have to write a whole blog article to sell a product. Blogosis would look like a maze if I started blogging about things that just don’t fit in. There are many different products to make money from, but not many that might actually deal with your niche. For instance, if you have a make money blog (which is a subcategory of this blog), you wouldn’t find ads for affiliate programs, but ads for loans, gambling sites, and insurance deals. You can see how they just might not fit the context of any blog.Of course, if I added these posts to Blogosis, it would be for my own personal gain. The problem with that is that this blog is here to help you, the reader, the subscriber with your own adventures into blogging. I don’t want to start posting positive reviews on things I don’t actually use. They almost all require you to make the blog entry positive and natural. You are selling a product when you post these kinds of things. Is that really ethical though, sponsoring a product you don’t use of care for?

Thats probably the biggest deal with this kind of posting. I wrote a blog about Jack from Jackbook (dot) com on one of my other blogs. He made a really gushy post of why he stopped posting paid posts. He felt bad for his readers, like he was doing something wrong. The ethics of it were so poor he “felt bad with his heart.” I guess selling a poor product can have that effect. What if you end up actually making someone buy in, and they end up with something that was opposite of what they expected. As humans, we would naturally feel guilty for that kind of action.

So, will I do paid for posts? Yes, because I am greedy. Haha. Actually, what I think I will do is only do it when the product works with the site, if it is worth while to sell (we’re talking money, people.), and only when I have enough posts to wrap around it in one day (I post one blog entry for Blogosis, post the paid post, and then another article for Blogosis). This will keep it away from the top of the blog, where I want the important messages to be. Also, I will take 25% of any money I make from Sponsored Reviews, Smorty, or other PPP services and put it towards the Blogosis Monthly Contest. How does this sound? If I am going to put crap on this blog, I at least want my subscribers to benefit.

For more information on PPP affiliates, check out my right sidebar or these links: Smorty and SponsoredReviews

Is making money from PPP ethical for you? Why or why not? Comment and let me know.

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Happenings at Blogosis

With the new layout here, I’ve been adding a lot of changes to Blogosis. I think it is turning into a really lovely blog, but as you preobably notice, it is really crowded. It is all just testing to optimize the blog, and I am sorry for any inconvieniences. So of course you want to know what I’m doing to the blog, in fact what I am doing may be helpful for your blog. Read along to find out.

blogging-underconstruction

You probably notice the changes to the sidebar as of now. I’ve changed the ads I’m displaying there. I put in a WidgetBucks widget. Entrecard has now been transferred to this site, despite how much I hate Entrecard. It’s in experimental stage right now, and I figure you want to earn more credits for the Blogosis Contest, so now is your chance to drop your card here.

I’ve also created an ultra-sleek header. I’m thinking I might start selling graphics, so if you are interested, contact me a justindupre@blogosis.com.

I’ve started selling space ad spots on the side. If you’d like to purchase a spot, just click on the ad placeholder and it will open up to your email, and you can just send details on what you want. Ads will run for one month at a time. Buy a spot this week and I will take off $5 dollars.

At the end of my posts you may be seeing a new experiment I am running. I’m using an affiliate program and posting a link to one of their products at the end of the posts. It doesn’t get in the way of the content so it isn’t too distracting. You might want to try that on your posts, to generate some extra revenue.

I’m am looking for guest posters. If you have any useful, controversial, or entertaining articles you’d like to see on Blogosis, please email me. With your email, send me the link to your blog or website,your best article there, and an article you would like to see here. Don’t worry, I won’t post without your permission, and you will know when you are posted. Think of this as a good way to get a back link to your blog and a little extra traffic.


In other news, I was looking at my other blog, one I never do anything with, and I looked at my PR. It is a PR7 blog! How? I have no idea. Go check for yourselves at Stumbled Here.Speaking of Stumbling, I had a huge hit count come from Stumble Upon yesterday. I guess someone stumbled that page where I said I will give away Entrecard credits. Entrecard? Come on, we all know Entrecard is crap. Anyways, it brought in 164 hits, with only a 23% bounce back rating. That is excellent!

Blog subscribers are up to 36 from 10 last week. Great conversion!

I have been emailing Darren Rowse of ProBlogger dot com, and it seems like I may be a future guest poster there. I am really excited for the opportunity, and psyched that he said he was interested in what I had to write. Look forward to some traffic if I get posted!!

Oh yeah, anyone who comments on my blog from now until January 19th (My birthday) will get a free 125 x 125 ad on my blog for a month. Make those comments useful, I may be basing my judgement on what comments I found the most entertaining or useful. Spam comments will not enter you for a chance to win. Seems like I only like to give for my birthday, right?

You Don’t Need to Be Weird to be a Good Blogger

I just started my Introduction to Philosophy course today at college. My professor seems like a great guy and dedicated to what he does. He is extremely intelligent, with three majors (Philosophy, Business Management, and Economics) and he “comes prepared to class with a sense of humor” according to his syllabus. He delivers. Anyways, here is what he had to say to our class today.

Philosopher

Read the rest of this entry »

Back from the Dead: Me vs. Noob

This was a funny post I put up on an old blog, attempting to challenge Blogger Noob on one of his posts. I attacked him to see whether or not I would actually get traffic. My traffic about tripled. In the end, he acknowledged me and my writing, and his blog has been one of my best sources of traffic.


First of all, let’s look at BloggerNoob.com and his post Anonymity helps create professionalism.” Here’s his image of anonymity:who Back from the Dead: Me vs. Noob Read the rest of this entry »