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Ninja Affiliate Plugin for WordPress - Special Price for ProBlogger Readers Posted: 20 Feb 2009 03:16 AM PST I’m about to head out the door for a 10 day vacation but before I do I want to pass on a special offer exclusive to ProBlogger readers (that I’ve just had offered to us) for a cool product that those of you who run affiliate programs on your blog might want to check out. It is a WordPress plugin called Ninja Affiliate and you can have it for a third off the normal price. I know some of you use this one already but I’ve only had the opportunity to check it out more recently and I have been quite impressed by it. In short it is a management tool that allows you to manage all of the affiliate links on your blog. This product has a lot of features built in including:
There is a lot more information on the sales page (the videos will show you how to use it and give you a good feel for whether it is for you) for the product and I’m not going to rehash it all here - except to say that I wish I’d had something like this when I started promoting affiliate products. The special offer for ProBlogger readers…is this - $30 off the plugin. It’s normally $97 and until midnight on 28th February it’s $67 - a third off. You can install it on as many WP blogs as you own. You have 8 weeks to test it and see if it is right for you and then they offer a money back guarantee. To get the discount you need to buy it from this special page that they’ve set up for ProBlogger readers. PS: While I’m gone on my break….ProBlogger will continue to have some great content. I have a few guest posts from some great bloggers already scheduled as well as a 10 part series of posts that I wrote over the last few weeks on ‘how to take your blog to the next level‘ - a series especially for bloggers who have moved past their launch phase and are wanting to step it up. |
AdSense Lets You Change Your Font in Ad Units Posted: 19 Feb 2009 05:25 PM PST AdSense have just announced a new feature that many of us have been asking for for a while - the ability to change fonts in ad units. While there’s not an extensive choice of fonts (they allow Arial, Times, and Verdana font faces) it is better than nothing and allows publishers to tweak the way their ads look to fit with the design of their sites. Find out how to access the new fonts via the official AdSense Blog. |
A Secret to Writing Posts that Go Viral on Twitter Posted: 19 Feb 2009 06:18 AM PST There are many reasons that a blog post might get spread widely through ‘ReTweets’ (when one person passes on the tweet of another) but one fairly obvious, yet often overlooked one, has to do with the length of your blog post title. Yesterday on TwiTip I published a post with a formula for getting ReTweeted on twitter. You can read the full thing for yourself but the author of the post (@louisedoherty) proposed that to increase the chances of one of your tweets being ReTweeted that you need to keep your own tweet shorter than the 140 characters allowed by Twitter so that the person can include other information (your username, the @ symbol and the letters RT). I’ve seen the wisdom of theory of Louise many times in my own use of Twitter. If I tweet something that is the maximum of 140 characters it make it more tricky for followers to retweet - they either have to change my tweet or don’t do it. OK - so this applies to bloggers how? Twitter can send you a lot of traffic if a link to one of your posts gets spread around via ReTweeting. Just look at the Top 100 Retweeted Links on Twitter at the moment - as I write this the top one has been passed on 331 times which means it is a link that could have been viewed on Twitter by many thousands of people. To help the ReTweet thing along a little keep your titles short. They don’t need to be 3 words long - but keep in mind that when someone is going to tweet a link to your post that they will usually include: 1. The title of your post 2. A URL (often shortened using tinyurl or some other shortening service which means it’ll be anything from 20 to 26 characters) They may also want to include a comment about your link. That’s not all you want to think about - you then should consider that for the link to be ReTweeted it will include all of the above information plus: 1. The username of the person being retweeted with the @ symbol (usually 5-12 characters) 2. The letters RT and sometimes a : as well as a space after it (3-4 characters) You can see that the number of characters is starting to add up so shorter Titles can definitely help. Lets workshop it:
So far the original tweet is 95 characters long. And would look like: ‘Reading: A Secret to Writing Posts that Go Viral on Twitter http://twurl.nl/qejpzq - Cool Post’ Lets just say it was @chrisbrogan who made the above tweet. As Chris has a lot of great followers at least one of them is bound to retweet it. At the very least their retweet would read: ‘RT: @chrisbrogan Reading: A Secret to Writing Posts that Go Viral on Twitter http://twurl.nl/qejpzq - Cool Post’ We’re still under the limit of 140 and with 29 characters to spare could have added a few words to our title. This is not something that I would spend a lot of time on and I would not compromise my titles too much to get them down in character length - however as someone who has seen significant traffic from Twitter over the last 6 months it is definitely a factor that I keep in the back of my mind as I blog. PS: another reason to keep titles down in length is that Google has a cut off of 70 characters when it displays page titles in search results. A title over 70 characters gets chopped off mid title which could decrease the chances of someone clicking it. I’m told that other search engines cut off titles at as little as 65 characters so perhaps that is a better cut off point. Tags: Writing Content |
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