Category: Tips

Smart and painless ways to save money in 2011

Are you worried about your future savings? Without a proper plan you can not make your dreams of saving money come true. If your New Year resolution is to save money then chalk out an appropriate plan for it first. In 2011 try some smart and painless ways to save some extra bucks in your wallet.

Get into the habit of tracking your spending first. Review your expenditures thoroughly to identify the areas where you tend to overspend. Make a realistic budget for yourself based on your expenses, debt payments and income.

Make all the due payments on time. If you act a little cautious you can definitely avoid paying late fees and extra charges. Withdraw cash from your bank or your bank’s ATM only. It can save you from paying extra fees on your own money. Read more »

5 online money making idea for college students

Knowledge can be used to make money by giving tuition to other students online. If you are good student of mathematic or English then use your knowledge to teach the other students.
Read more »

Let Your Blog Work Hard While You Take a Break

blogging Let Your Blog Work Hard While You Take a Break
Photo by Joy Banerjee

In just a few days, my family and I will be traveling almost 7,000 miles and through seven time zones. I have a sneaky suspicion I’ll be busier dealing with two preschoolers wanting to sleep all day and party all night than I will blogging.

But since blogging provides my family a part-time income, it’s still important for me to keep it up-to-date. As much as I’d like, I can’t just take two solid weeks off with no new material. My readers wouldn’t like that, not to mention those who’ve purchased advertising on the site.

So how do I keep Simple Mom fresh while still tending to my main priority – my family? Here are a few simple ways to take time off your blog – without letting it dry up:

Write Your Articles Ahead Of Time

The past few weeks, I’ve been doubling up my writing, so that posts will continue to go live while I pack, travel, and sleep. Most blogging platforms allow for scheduled posting, so that you can prepare posts to go live months in advance.

Keep a Stockpile of Posts on File

I’m actually not using any this time, but I’ve done this in the past. Whenever you have a bit of downtime, go ahead and write some timeless posts – and by “timeless,” I mean posts that aren’t about anything newsworthy. Keep them on file, completely ready to go – if you use WordPress, like me, then you can simply save posts without actually publishing them. Whenever life is busy, you can just open up your post and hit “publish” – a brand new post is now live.

Recruit Guest Writers

Having fellow bloggers publish articles on your site can be a great win-win situation for both of you. If she has a similar audience size as you, you can essentially “share” traffic – ask her to mention her guest post on her blog, and hopefully, her readers will click over to your blog. Link to her blog in her author’s bio, and your readers will be exposed to her place as well. If you’re like-minded, chances are, your audiences will appreciate both of your sites.

Republish Some of Your Older Posts

If your readership has grown since your blog’s inception, you can pull some of your earlier work and publish it again. Make sure your article is at least a few months old, and don’t forget to add a disclaimer at the beginning – something like, “This post was originally published on January 3, 2008.”
Blogging is a great hobby, and for some of us, it’s a beautiful way to let us work from home. But you don’t want it to run your life, and there are times when you need to take a break from the laptop. Use smart and strategic tactics to keep your blog running strong, even when you’re on break.

What Kind of Blog Are You?

The blogosphere is growing in leaps and bounds, and it’s showing no signs of stopping. It has become a beautiful community of friends, an even playing field for successful networking, and a veritable gold mine for advertisers. But because there are so many blogs out there, the party is teeming with people, and it’s getting harder to find the people you’re looking for.

blogging What kind of blog are you?

Photo by Sophie Saller

The blogs who find their crowd are the ones with a laser-sharp focus. In blog-speak, it’s simply called a niche.

What is your blog’s niche? Does it even have a niche? Or does it, but you don’t have a clue how to define it?

Let me be bold and say that there are an awful lot of blogs out there that are trying to do too many things. They’re trying to update faraway friends about their family, to change their reader’s political persuasion, to share their passion for their newfound hobby of hamster-watching, and to make money.

Writing about everything and nothing is fine if blogging is purely for fun – it’s a great creative outlet to have a place to wax poetic and spill out your brain’s stream of consciousness.

But if you’re trying to make money, or even just be the go-to resource for a specific topic, you need to narrow, narrow, narrow that focus so that it stands on the head of a pin.

You want your readers to know what you’re about. You want them to identify your blog as a place about something specific. It’s been said that you have four seconds to tell a new visitor to your site what you’re about. Does your blog do that?

Let me emphasize again – it’s perfectly okay for your blog to simply be about you if blogging is your hobby. Go with it! Make it your little corner of happiness. But if you want to earn a few dollars on the side with your blog, it will come a bit easier if you find your niche.

In essence, I’m saying that blogs usually come in two main categories:

• a Cat Blog – This term comes from Seth Godin, who coined it to mean a blog about your personal life. You share the funny things your toddler says, the latest with building your new backyard deck, your cat. A cat blog. This isn’t meant to be an insulting term – I have a cat blog. But here, you aren’t really terribly concerned with things like ranking well with Google via SEO, or getting a big subscriber base. You just want to keep your parents and old college roommate in the know about your family’s daily mishaps. And that’s great.

• a Niche Blog – This is a blog about something specific. These are blogs about cooking, or kid’s crafts, or personal finance. I also have a niche blog, which is about life hacks for home managers. This is often where you want to do things like rank well with Google, earn a side income, and build up your readership. You’re passionate about a particular topic and you just have to get your thoughts out there. This kind of blog can definitely be fun and laid-back, for sure, but in some ways, it’s also a business.

There’s nothing that says you can’t have two, or three, or eight blogs – so instead of making your one blog about everything you care about, why not have several different ones? That way, if your hamster-watching blog takes off, you can be the expert blog in your niche, the go-to resource for all things hamster. The grandparents get the grandkid photos, and the hamster enthusiasts get the, well, hamsters.

So what kind of blog are you? Decide what you’re about, narrow it down to that topic, and go after it.

As I write about blogging here on Blissfully Domestic, I want to be a resource for you. I want to know your blogging questions! I want to throw out my ideas for both cat blogs and niche blogs. And I want to help you find more enjoyment in the blogging process. The blogosphere really is a blessing, especially for the stay-at-home mom, who now has a place to network and socialize with other adults from home.

Learn From the Best

Even though I’ve been a blogger since 2005, I’ve learned so much about blogging from others just this past year. Sometimes, it’s reinventing the wheel to regurgitate the tips and tricks others have already said. So without adieu, here are some great meta blogs (blogs about blogging), and a few of their best articles.

ProBlogger | by Darren Rowse
Blogging for Beginners
How Bloggers Make Money from Blogs
21 Ways to Make Your Blog or Website Sticky

Skelliewag | by Skellie
Top 20 Ways to Come Up With Amazing Ideas
How to Get Piles of Links, Subscribers, and Comments
101 Essential Blogging Skills

Copyblogger | by Brian Clark
10 Effective Ways to Get More Blog Subscribers
5 Grammatical Errors That Make You Look Dumb
5 Signs Your Blog Post is Going Horribly Wrong

Daily Blog Tips | by Daniel Scocco
How To Find Advertisers for Your Website: The Ultimate Guide
30 Traffic Generation Tips
The Art of Writing Catchy Articles: 11 Simple Tips

blogging Blogging: Learn From The Best

Photo by Daniel Sandoval

NxE | by various contributors
31 Days to Becoming a Better Blogger
Making a New Blog Seem More Established
12 Ways to Turn a Boring Post into Pure Gold

Dosh Dosh | by Maki
How to Become an Authority in Your Niche
How to Get Traffic and Links from Popular Blogs
How to Get Repeat Visitors to Your Website

Pearsonified | by Chris Pearson
SEO for Everybody
Read This and Become a Professional Design Analyst
How to Format Images for Feed Readers

blogging Blogging: Learn From The Best

Photo by David Joyce

The Blog Herald | by various contributors
Blog Design: What is That Doing There?
Blogging Burnout Prevention Tips
Why Am I Doing This Blogging Thing?

Blogging Basics 101 | by Chilihead/Melanie
So, Um, How Do I Start My Own Blog?
How We Communicate: FAQs for Beginning Bloggers
Basic Blog Design Principles (by Karla!)

Blog Well | by Martyn and Lidija Davis
Focus on Writing Well and Search Engines Will Love You
Search Engine Friendly Design
How to Blog Well

I also highly encourage you to check out Blog Coach, a relatively new blog founded by long-time blogger Angie Wynne of Baby Cheapskate. She features some great blogger interviewers, and each week highlights a blog that asks for some critique and feedback.